ANGERS,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal,
under
the
provisions
of
sec.
58
and
following
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
1917,
and
the
amendments
thereto
from
the
assessment
of
the
appellant
for
the
years
1938
and
1939
in
respect
of
disbursements
made
or
expenses
laid
out
by
it
for
the
alleged
purpose
of
earning
its
income,
consisting
of
legal
costs
and
expenses
in
prosecuting
a
suit
brought
by
it
in
the
United
States
District
Court,
Western
District
of
Washington,
against
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
of
Seattle,
incorporated
under
a
statute
of
the
State
of
Washington.
On
the
application
of
the
solicitor
for
respondent
an
order
was
made
that
formal
pleadings
be
filed.
A
brief
summary
of
these
pleadings
seems
apposite.
In
its
statement
of
claim
the
appellant
alleges
in
substance:
the
appellant
is
a
corporation
incorporated
by
Royal
Charter
on
the
2nd
of
May,
1670,
granted
by
His
Majesty
Charles
the
second,
giving
appellant
the
lands,
territories,
rights
and
powers
therein
set
forth;
it
is
organized
under
the
laws
of
the
Kingdom
of
Great
Britain
and
Northern
Ireland
and
has
its
head
office
in
London,
England,
and
its
chief
office
for
Canada
in
Winnipeg,
Manitoba
;
the
appellant
has
carried
on
continuously
since
its
incorporation
trade
and
commerce
in
numerous
kinds
of
merchandise
under
its
said
charter
and
supplementary
charters;
such
trade
and
business
were
not
only
in
Canada,
but
for
many
years
also
in
what
is
now
part
of
the
United
States;
the
appellant
has
maintained
and
still
maintains
many
stores
and
trading
posts
in
Canada
and
its
goods
are
sold
not
only
in
Canada
but
much
thereof
is
distributed
to
persons
living
in
the
United
States,
chiefly
blankets,
tea,
coffee
and
liquors;
the
appellant
is
the
oldest
trading
corporation
and
the
largest
dealer
in
raw
furs
in
the
English
speaking
world;
it
has
acquired
a
valuable
and
long
established
reputation
for
honest
and
reliable
dealings
and
has
a
valuable
trade
name
and
goodwill
by
reason
of
its
long
history
and
trading
principles;
the
name
under
which
appellant
was
incorporated
is
as
set
forth
in
the
style
of
cause
but
it
is
commonly
called
and
generally
known
as
Hudson’s
Bay
Company,
in
Canada
and
the
United
States
;
during
the
history
of
the
appellant
a
number
of
persons,
firms
or
corporations,
in
Canada
and
the
United
States,
have
adopted
the
name
""Hudson’s
Bay
Fur
Company’’
or
some
similar
name
such
as
to
lead
the
public
and
their
customers
to
believe
they
are
dealing
with
the
appellant
or
a
firm
or
company
or
subsidiary
associated
with
it,
especially
in
regard
to
dealers
in
furs,
either
raw
or
dressed,
and
fur
garments;
the
appellant
for
the
protection
of
its
trade
and
business
and
to
prevent
the
infringement
of
its
trade
name,
reputation
and
business
has
endeavoured
to
restrain
the
use
of
such
names;
this
has
been
done
by
negotiation
and
correspondence
and
in
many
eases
suits
have
been
brought
in
the
Courts
of
the
United
States
and
during
the
past
twenty
years
or
more
the
appellant
has
expended
large
sums
of
money
for
that
purpose
and
is
still
continuing
to
do
so;
in
1904
a
company
was
incorporated
in
the
State
of
Washington
under
the
name
of
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
Inc.
and
carried
on
business
in
the
purchase
and
sale
of
raw
and
dressed
furs
and
fur
garments
in
the
City
of
Seattle,
in
the
said
state;
in
April
1934
the
appellant
filed
a
Bill
of
Complaint
in
the
United
States
District
Court
for
the
Western
District
of
Washington,
Ninth
Circuit,
in
Equity,
No.
1049,
against
the
said
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
Inc.
as
defendant,
which
said
Bill
of
Complaint
set
forth
briefly
the
history,
reputation
and
business
of
the
appellant,
and
particularly
its
trade
name,
reputation
and
goodwill
in
the
United
States
and
the
sale
of
its
goods
bearing
its
name
or
label
;
in
the
said
suit
the
appellant
claimed
a
decree
for
a
perpetual
injunction
restraining
the
defendant,
its
agents
and
employees
from
in
any
way
conducting
business
under
the
name
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
or
any
colourable
imitation
thereof
or
any
similar
name
calculated
to
deceive
the
public,
and
also
claimed
the
profits
realized
by
the
defendant
and
damages
sustained
by
the
appellant
by
reason
of
the
unlawful
acts
of
the
defendant;
the
latter
contested
the
suit,
which
was
duly
prosecuted
by
the
appellant
and
came
on
for
hearing
in
May
19388;
in
its
fiscal
year
ending
January
31,
1938,
the
appellant
paid
to
attorneys,
solicitors
and
counsel
for
their
services
rendered
in
respect
of
the
said
suit
and
for
their
disbursements
therein
the
sum
of
$10,377;
in
its
fiscal
year
ending
January
31,
1939,
the
appellant
paid
to
attorneys,
solicitors
and
counsel
for
their
services
rendered
in
respect
of
the
said
suit
and
for
their
disbursements
therein
the
sum
of
$22,953;
on
or
about
May
31,
1938,
the
appellant
filed
with
the
Inspector
of
Income
Tax
its
income
tax
return
for
its
fiscal
year
ending
January
31,
1938,
showing
income
subject
to
tax
of
$1,507,334
and
the
tax
of
15%
at
$226,100;
the
appellant
deducted
from
its
income
the
said
sum
of
$10,377
paid
as
legal
costs
in
respect
of
the
said
suit
against
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
Inc.
;
by
notice
of
assessment
of
October
2,
1940,
the
said
return
was
approved;
on
January
16,
1941,
another
notice
of
assessment
was
given,
which
also
approved
of
the
said
deduction;
on
December
3,
1941,
a
further
assessment
was
made
and
in
it
the
said
sum
was
disallowed
as
a
deduction;
on
or
about
May
30,
1939,
the
appellant
filed
with
the
Inspector
of
Income
Tax
its
income
tax
return
for
its
fiscal
year
ending
January
31,
1939,
showing
income
subject
to
tax
of
$1,005,568
and
the
tax
of
15%
at
$150,835;
the
appellant
deducted
from
its
income
the
said
sum
of
$22,953;
by
notice
of
assessment
dated
December
3,
1941,
the
Minister
disallowed
the
payment
of
the
said
sum
for
legal
costs
for
the
fiscal
year
ending
January
31,
1939;
the
said
sums
($10,377
and
$22,953)
were
assessed
in
each
of
the
said
years
as
part
of
the
income
of
appellant
under.
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
:
the
appellant
appealed
from
the
said
assessments
by
notices
of
appeal
dated
December
31,
1941;
the
Minister
confirmed
the
assessments
and
the
disallowance
of
the
sums
paid
for
legal
expenses
;
by
notice
of
F'ebruary
5,
1942,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
affirmed
the
assessments
and
notified
the
appellant
to
that
effect
;
the
appellant,
dissatisfied
with
the
said
decision,
on
or
about
March
3,
1942,
mailed
to
the
Minister
a
notice
of
dissatisfaction,
accompanied
with
a
statement
of
further
facts
and
reasons
in
support
of
its
appeal
for
each
of
said
fiscal
years;
by
notice
of
May
11,
1944,
the
Minister
replied
denying
the
allegations
in
the
notices
of
appeal
and
dissatisfaction
in
so
far
as
incompatible
with
the
decision
and
affirmed
the
said
assessments
;
the
appellant
submits
that
the
Minister
has
improperly
disallowed
the
appellant’s
deductions
of
said
sums
from
its
income
and
that
the
said
disallowance
is
contrary
to
law
and
the
provisions
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
that
the
said
sums
so
paid
for
legal
costs
are
proper
deductions
;
the
appellant
therefore
prays
that
its
appeal
be
allowed
and
the
said
sums
allowed
as
a
proper
deduction
from
appellant’s
income
for
the
said
fiscal
years
and
that
it
be
paid
its
costs.
In
his
statement
of
defence
the
respondent
says
in
substance
as
follows
:
he
admits
the
incorporation
of
the
appellant
company
by
Royal
Charter,
the
location
of
its
head
office
in
London,
England
and
its
chief
office
in
Canada
in
Winnipeg,
Manitoba,
and
the
fact
that
it
carries
on
business
in
Canada;
he
admits
that
the
appellant
was
incorporated
under
the
name
set
forth
in
the
style
of
cause
and
is
known
as
Hudson’s
Bay
Company
in
Canada;
he
admits
that
in
its
fiscal
years
ending
January
31,
1938
and
January
31,
1939,
the
appellant
paid
to
attorneys,
solicitors
and
counsel
for
services
rendered
in
respect
of
the
suit
brought
by
it
against
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
Inc.
in
the
United
States
District
Court
for
the
Western
District
of
Washington,
Ninth
Circuit,
in
Equity
the
sums
of
$10,377
and
$22,953
respectively
;
he
admits
that,
on
or
about
May
31,
1938,
the
appellant
filed
with
the
Inspector
of
Income
Tax
its
return
for
its
fiscal
year
ending
January
31,
1938,
showing
income
subject
to
tax
of
$1,507,334
and
the
tax
of
15%
at
$226,100
and
that
it
deducted
from
its
income
the
sum
of
$10,377
paid
as
legal
costs
in
respect
of
the
said
suit
against
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
Inc.
;
he
admits
that
the
respondent
assessed
the
appellant
for
the
year
ending
January
31,
1938,
by
notice
of
assessment
dated
December
3,
1941,
wherein
the
sum
of
$10,377
claimed
as
legal
costs
was
disallowed
as
a
deduction
in
determining
taxable
income,
but
denies
that
the
return
of
the
appellant
was
previously
approved
and
pleads
sec.
55
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1927,
e.
97,
as
amended
by
23-24
George
V,
c.
14,
sec.
8,
which
by
virtue
of
sec.
10
thereof
is
applicable
to
the
return
here
in
question
;
he
admits
that,
on
or
about
May
30,
1939,
the
appellant
filed
with
the
Inspector
of
Income
Tax
its
return
for
its
fiscal
year
ending
January
31,
1939,
showing
income
subject
to
tax
of
$1,005,568
and
the
tax
of
15%
at
$150,835
and
that
it
deducted
from
its
income
the
sum
of
$22,953;
he
admits
that
by
notice
of
assessment
dated
December
3,
1941,
the
Minister
disallowed
the
payment
of
the
said
sum
for
legal
costs
for
the
fiscal
year
ending
January
31,
1939
;
he
admits
that
the
sums
of
$10,377
and
$22,953
were
assessed
in
each
of
said
fiscal
years
as
part
of
appellant’s
income;
he
admits
that
the
appellant
appealed
from
the
said
assessments
by
notices
dated
December
31,
1941
and
that
the
Minister
confirmed
the
said
assessments
and
the
disallowance
of
the
said
sums
for
legal
expenses
;
he
admits
that
by
notice
of
February
5,
1942,
the
Minister
affirmed
the
assessments
and
notified
the
appellant
to
that
effect
;
he
admits
that
the
appellant
was
dissatisfied
with
the
decision
and,
on
or
about
March
8,
1942,
mailed
to
the
Minister
a
notice
of
dissatisfaction
accompanied
by
a
statement
of
further
facts
and
reasons
in
support
of
its
appeals:
he
admits
that
by
notice
of
May
11,
1944,
the
Minister
replied
denying
the
allegations
of
the
notices
of
appeal
and
dissatisfaction
in
so
far
as
incompatible
with
the
decision
and
affirmed
the
assessments
;
he
denies
all
other
allegations
of
the
statement
of
claim;
in
further
answer
the
respondent
states:
the
appellant
is
a
person,
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
liable
to
tax
under
the
provisions
thereof
for
the
taxation
years
1938
and
1939
;
the
respondent
duly
determined
the
net
income
of
the
appellant
for
the
years
1938
and
1939
to
be
in
the
sums
of
$1,512,874.29
and
$1,030,208.80
respectively
and
levied
tax
thereon
in
the
sums
of
$226,931.14
and
$154,531.32
respectively,
by
notices
of
assessment
dated
December
3,
1941;
;
the
legal
costs
of
$10,377
expended
in
1938
and
of
$22,952.80
expended
in
1939
or
any
part
thereof
were
not
disbursements
or
expenses
wholly,
exclusively
and
necessarily
laid
out
or
expended
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
income
of
the
appellant
for
the
1938
and
1939
fiscal
periods
within
the
meaning
of
sec.
6(a)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act;
the
said
deductions
claimed
in
this
appeal
were
outlays
or
payments
on
account
of
capital
within
the
meaning
of
sec.
6(b)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
The
appellant’s
income
tax
returns
for
the
fiscal
years
ended
January
31,
1938
and
January
31,
1939
respectively
are
among
the
documents
filed
by
the
deputy
minister
(taxation)
and
form
part
of
the
record.
The
first
shows
an
income
subject
to
tax
amounting
to
$1,507,334
and
the
tax
of
15%
amounting
to
$226,100
and
the
second
an
income
subject
to
tax
of
$1,005,568
and
the
tax
of
15%
amounting
to
$150,835.
The
notice
of
assessment
for
the
year
ended
January
31,
1938,
annexed
to
the
income
tax
return
of
the
same
year,
appearing
to
have
been
mailed
on
December
3,
1941,
shows
a
taxable
income
of
$1,512,874.29
and
the
tax
of
15%
amounting
to
$226,931.14.
The
notice
of
assessment
for
the
year
ended
January
31,
1939,
annexed
to
the
income
return
of
the
same
year,
appearing
to
have
been
mailed
on
December
3,
1941,
shows
a
taxable
income
of
$1,030,208.80
and
the
tax
of
15%
amounting
to
$154,531.32.
Notices
of
appeal
dated
December
31,
1941,
were
given
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
by
appellant’s
solicitors
from
the
aforesaid
assessments,
in
compliance
with
sec.
58
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
In
addition
to
stating
in
each
of
these
notices
that
in
declaring
its
income
for
the
taxation
years
1938
and
1939
the
appellant
deducted
as
disbursements
or
expenses
laid
out
for
the
purpose
of
earning
its
income
the
sum
of
$10,377
in
1938
and
the
sum
of
$22,952.80
in
1939
paid
as
legal
costs
and
expenses
in
prosecuting
a
suit
brought
by
it
in
the
United
States
District
Court,
Western
District
of
Washington,
Northern
Division
in
Equity
against
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
of
Seattle,
incorporated
under
a
statute
of
the
State
of
Washington,
and
further
stating
that
in
the
notices
of
assessment
for
the
said
periods
the
said
deductions
have
been
disallowed
and
that
the
appellant
appeals
from
such
decisions
and
claims
that
the
said
sums
should
be
allowed
as
necessary
disbursements,
and
relating
the
fact
that
it
was
incorporated
by
Royal
Charter
on
May
2,
1670,
that
it
is
the
oldest
corporation
carrying
on
business
in
the
English
speaking
world,
that
it
has
acquired
a
high
reputation
in
the
business
world
for
honourable
and
fair
dealing
and
that
its
name
and
goodwill
are
very
valuable
in
regard
to
business,
the
appellant
goes
on
to
say
in
brief
as
follows:
In
the
early
part
of
the
century
Mauritz
Guttmann,
a
fur
buyer
in
the
City
of
Vancouver,
British
Columbia,
who
had
dealings
with
appellant,
left
Canada,
established
a
business
in
the
City
of
Seattle
and
incorporated
a
company
under
the
name
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
;
the
appellant,
through
its
officials
and
public
notice,
objected
to
the
use
of
the
said
name
and
through
its
attorneys
had
prolonged
negotiations
and
correspondence
about
a
change
of
name;
the
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company,
largely
because
of
its
name,
became
known
as
the
largest
fur
dealer
on
the
Pacific
Coast
and
for
a
time
conducted
two
stores
in
the
City
of
Seattle;
many
of
its
customers
believed
that
they
were
dealing
with
the
appellant
or
a
subsidiary
thereof
and
the
public
was
confused
by
the
use
of
the
said
name
and
the
appellant
was
thereby
losing
business
;
although
the
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
led
the
appellant
to
believe
that
it
would
change
its
name
and
promised
to
do
so,
yet
it
failed
in
this;
in
1934
the
appellant
brought
a
suit
in
the
said
Court
for
an
injunction
and
damages;
the
sums
deducted
as
disbursements
were
expended
in
the
prosecution
of
the
said
suit
or
in
negotiations
leading
to
its
settlement
;
at
the
trial
several
witnesses
testified
that
they
had
dealt
with
the
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
believing
that
it
was
a
branch
or
subsidiary
of
the
appellant
and
that
they
would
not
have
dealt
with
it
had
they
known
the
facts
;
there
is
a
large
tourist
traffic
on
the
Pacifie
Coast
throughout
the
year;
many
tourists
visit
Canada
and
the
appellant’s
stores
at
Vancouver
and
Victoria
and
buy
goods
there;
more
would
have
done
so
had
they
not
believed
that
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
was
a
branch
of
the
appellant
;
the
discontinuance
of
this
name
by
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
should
be
of
substantial
benefit
to
the
appellant’s
business
at
Victoria
and
Vancouver;
in
addition
to
those
large
department
stores
the
appellant
has
smaller
department
or
general
stores
at
the
cities
of
Nelson,
Vernon
and
Kamloops,
in
British
Columbia
;
letters
have
been
received
by
the
managers
of
these
stores
from
residents
of
the
United
States
indicating
that
they
believed
that
the
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company’s
store
in
Seattle
was
a
branch
of
appellant;
the
appellant
has
for
hundreds
of
years
imported
from
England
blankets
known
as
"Hudson
Bay
Point
Blankets’’,
which
are
sold
largely
in
the
United
States
through
distributors
of
the
appellant
there;
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
in
Seattle
bought
such
blankets
from
the
distributors
in
Seattle
and
showed
them
in
the
window
of
their
store
with
cards
indicating
that
they
were
Hudson’s
Bay
Blankets,
thereby
intending
to
induce
the
publie
to
believe
that
the
entire
business
was
conducted
by
the
appellant
or
was
a
branch
of
it
;
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
dealt
in
such
blankets;
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
not
only
imitated
the
appellant’s
name
but
adopted
other
practices
leading
the
public
to
believe
that
it
was
associated
with
the
appellant
;
for
example
it
adopted
a
picture
of
the
beaver
as
its
coat
of
arms,
when
the
beaver
has
for
centuries
been
intimately
associated
with
appellant;
this
litigation
was
incurred
to
protect
the
name,
reputation
and
goodwill
of
appellant
and
to
turn
customers
from
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
to
appellant
and
to
make
a
profit
from
the
sale
of
its
goods
;
the
suit
was
not
brought
to
defend
its
corporate
rights,
but
to
protect
its
trade
name
and
trade
;
the
appellant
also
sells
liquors,
tobacco,
tea
and
coffee
through
distributors
in
the
United
States
and
it
was
and
is
essential
to
protect
its
name,
reputation
and
character
by
preventing
others
from
using
its
.name
or
imitations
thereof;
the
appellant.
for
many
years
carried
on
business
at
many
places
in
what
was
known
as
Oregon
Territory
and
had
an
important
post
known
as
Fort
Vancouver
on
the
Columbia
River
in
what
is
now
the
state
of
Washington
and
during
that
period
it
acquired
a
valuable
reputation
;
the
said
expenses
are
not
a
capital
expenditure;
there
are
still
companies
in
the
United
States
doing
business
under
the
name
of
4
‘Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company”
and
others
may
start
up
any
time.
The
decision
of
the
Minister,
represented
by
the
Commissioner
of
Income
Tax,
who
by
the
way
signed
the
notices
of
assessment,
dated
February
5,
1942,
included
among
the
documents
filed
by
the
Minister
and
forming
part
of
the
record,
after
referring
to
the
fact
that
the
taxpayer
incurred
certain
legal
costs
and
expenses
in
the
suit
brought
by
it
in
the
United
States
District
Court,
Western
Division
of
Washington,
against
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
of
Seattle
and
that
in
determining
its
income
and
making
its
return,
it
added
back
to
income
for
the
year
1938
$10,000
of
said
costs
and
expenses
and
claimed
as
a
deduction
from
income
the
sum
of
$377,
and
for
the
year
1939
claimed
as
a
deduction
the
sum
of
$22,952.80,
contains
the
following
considerations
:
“AND
WHEREAS
in
assessing
the
taxpayer
for
the
years
1938
and
1939,
the
aforesaid
legal
costs
and
expenses
were
disallowed
as
deductions
from
income
and
taxes
were
assessed
by
Notices
of
Assessment
dated
the
3rd
December,
1941.
AND
WHEREAS
Notices
of
Appeal
were
received
from
the
soheitors
for
the
taxpayer
dated
the
31st
December,
1941,
in
which
objection
is
taken
to
the
assessed
tax
for
the
reasons
therein
set
forth
and
in
particular
for
the
reason
that
the
litigation
was
incurred
to
protect
the
name,
reputation
and
goodwill
of
the
taxpayer
and
to
turn
customers
from
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
to
it
and
to
make
profit
from
the
sale
of
its
goods;
that
the
suit
was
not
brought
to
defend
its
corporate
rights
but
to
protect
its
trade
name
and
trade;
that
said
expense
was
not
a
capital
expenditure
and
should
be
allowed
for
Income
Tax
purposes.”
The
decision
then
concludes
thus:
.“The
Honourable
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
having
duly
considered
the
facts
as
set
forth
in
the
Notice
of
Appeal
and
matters
thereto
relating
hereby
affirms
the
said
Assessments
on
the
ground
that
the
legal
costs
and
expenses
in
question
were
expenses
of
the
taxpayer
not
wholly,
exclusively
and
necessarily
laid
out
or
expended
for
the
purpose
of
earning
its
income
but
were
in
fact
expenses
incurred
in
the
prosecution
of
its
action
to
protect
its
trade
name
and
trade
and
were
the
application
of
profits
after
they
had
been
earned
as
profits
for
the
purpose
of
earning
future
profits
and
accordingly
were
properly
disallowed
for
Income
Tax
purposes
under
and
by
reason
of
the
provisions
of
Section
6
and
other
provisions
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
in
that
respect
made
and
provided
and
the
Assessments
are
accordingly
affirmed
as
being
properly
levied.”
Notice
of
this
decision
was
given
to
appellant
and
its
solicitors
in
compliance
with
sec.
59
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
Following
this
decision
the
appellant
supplemented
its
notice
of
appeal
by
a
statement
of
facts,
dated
March
3,
1942,
also
attached
to
the
documents
filed
by
the
Minister;
it
contains
in
short
the
following
averments
:
in
paragraph
3
of
the
notice
of
appeal
M.
Gutmann
was
described
as
a
fur
buyer
in
the
"
i
City
of
Vancouver’’
when
it
should
read
in
the
""City
of
Victoria”;
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.
[1940-41]
C.T.C.
155
does
not
apply
to
the
present
case
and
it
and
the
reasons
therefor
are
distinguishable
;
further
a
petition
for
leave
to
appeal
to
His
Majesty
in
Council
from
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
has
been
filed
by
the
said
Gas
Company
and
the
decision
upon
the
said
petition
is
pending;
in
any
case
the
said
judgment
and
reasons
of
the
Supreme
Court
cannot
be
regarded
as
final
under
the
circumstances.
On
the
same
day
the
appellant
sent
to
the
Minister
a
notice
of
dissatisfaction,
which
merely
expresses
the
desire
that
its
appeal
from
the
decision
of
the
Minister
be
set
down
for
trial;
this
notice,
given
in
accordance
with
sec.
60
of
the
Act,
is
included
among
the
documents
filed
by
the
Minister.
Also
forming
part
of
the
record
produced
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
is
the
reply
of
the
Minister,
in
which
he
denies
the
allegations
contained
in
the
notice
of
appeal
and
the
notice
of
dissatisfaction
in
so
far
as
incompatible
with
the
allegations
of
his
decision
and
affirms
the
assessments
as
levied.
At
the
opening
of
the
trial
counsel
for
appellant
said
that,
in
view
of
the
voluminous
nature
of
the
pleadings,
he
and
his
opponent
had
prepared
a
summary
outlining
the
nature
of
the
case
;
it
was
read
into
the
record
as
follows
:
"‘The
disbursements
in
question
were
made
by
the
appellant,
which
is
commonly
known
as
the
Hudson’s
Bay
Company
and
is
a
dealer
in
furs,
both
raw
and
dressed,
and
fur
garments,
in
payment
of
legal
expenses
of
its
attorneys,
solicitors
and
counsel
for
services
in
connection
with
an
action
brought
by
the
appellant
in
the
United
States
District
Court
for
the
Western
District
of
Washington,
ninth
circuit,
against
Hudson’s
Bay
Fur
Company
Inc.,
a
trade
competitor,
which
the
appellant
alleged
had
designedly
adopted
the
name
used
by
it
to
restrain
that
company
from
interfering
with
the
appellant
‘s
trade.
The
said
action
was
terminated
by
the
issue
of
the
usual
injunction.
’
‘
A
brief
recapitulation
of
the
evidence
seems
convenient.
Counsel
for
appellant
filed
as
exhibits
the
following
docu-
ments
:
Exhibit
1—Certified
copy
of
bill
of
complaint,
in
the
United
States
District
Court,
for
the
Western
District
of
Washington,
ninth
circuit,
in
equity
No.
1049,
in
re
The
Governor
and
Company
of
Adventurers
of
England
trading
into
Hudson’s
Bay
(commonly
called
The
Hudson’s
Bay
Company)
v.
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company,
Inc.,
filed
April
6,
1934.
Exhibit
2—Certified
copy
of
amended
bill
of
complaint
filed
on
the
same
day.
Exhibit
3—Certified
copy
of
amended
bill
of
complaint
filed
on
October
6,
1936.,
Exhibit
4—Certified
copy
of
the
defendant’s
answer
to
the
bill
of
complaint,
filed
October
23,
1936.
Exhibit
5—Bill
of
particulars
by
defendants,
filed
August
2,
1937.
Exhibit
6—Certified
copy
of
stipulation,
filed
January
7,
1941.
In
the
document
called
stipulation,
a
copy
whereof
was
marked
as
exhibit
6,
it
is
stipulated
inter
alia
as
follows
:
the
defendant
admits
that
the
allegations
in
the
amended
bill
of
complaint
are
true;
the
plaintiff
may
cause
to
be
entered
herein
findings
of
fact,
conclusions
of
law
and/or
a
final
decree
in
accordance
with
paragraph
1
of
the
prayer
of
the
amended
bill
of
complaint;
the
plaintiff
waives
all
claims
for
damages
and
profits
prayed
for
in
paragraph
2
of
the
prayer
of
the
amended
bill
of
complaint;
the
parties
request
that
no
judgment
for
costs
shall
be
entered
against
the
plaintiff
or
the
defendant,
each
paying
their
own
costs;
the
defendant
requests
that
the
first
affirmative
defence
(sic)
and
paragraph
IV
of
the
fifth
affirmative
defense
of
its
answer
be
stricken.
I
do
not
believe
that
it
would
serve
any
useful
purpose
to
quote
or
even
merely
sum
up
the
statements
contained
in
the
first
affirmative
defence
and
in
paragraph
IV
of
the
fifth
affirmative
defence.
Having
been
struck
from
defendant’s
answer
they
are
totally
immaterial
and
irrelevant.
Exhibit
7—Copy
of
decree
dated
January
7,
1941
and
filed
on
same
day.
I
deem
it
advisable
to
quote
the
essential
portion
of
this
decree
:
°
it
is
therefore,
"ORDERED,
ADJUDGED
and
DECREED
that
a
perpetual
injunction
issue
out
of
and
under
the
seal
of
this
Court
directed
to
the
Defendant,
its
officers,
agents,
attorneys,
clerks,
servants,
workmen
and
employees,
enjoining
and
restraining
them
and
each
of
them
from
using
or
employing
(a)
the
name
‘‘
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company’’
and
any
name
having
the
words
"‘Hud-
son’’
and
"‘Bay’’
either
jointly
or
severally,
(b)
the
initials
“HB”,
(c)
any
colorable
imitation
of
the
name
‘‘Hudson’s
Bay’’
and
(d)
the
representation
of
a
beaver
in
its
crest;
or
any
similar
name
or
symbol
calculated
to
deceive
the
public
and
to
create
the
impression
that
the
defendant
is
in
any
manner
identified
or
affiliated
with
the
Plaintiff;
and
from
making
any
direct
or
indirect
representation,
either
oral,
written
or
printed,
and
either
publicly
or
privately
to
the
effect
that
the
Defendant
is
affiliated
or
in
any
manner
connected
in
a
business
way
with
the
Plaintiff.
The
foregoing
order
for
a
perpetual
injunction
is
subject
to
the
following
provisions
:—
•
'Provided,
first,
the
HUDSON
BAY
FUR
COMPANY
shall
have
the
right
to
use
the
name
‘Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company”
as
at
present
for
a
maximum
period
of
two
years
beginning
January
1,
1941,
during
which
period
the
said
HUDSON
BAY
FUR
COMPANY
shall
adopt
a
new
name
which
does
not
have
the
words
"Hudson”
and/or
‘‘Bay’’,
as
set
forth
above.
"
‘
Provided,
second,
after
the
adoption
of
the
said
new
name
the
HUDSON
BAY
FUR
COMPANY
shall
have
the
right
for
a
maximum
period
ending
December
31,
1946
to
use
and
only
to
use
in
combination
with
said
new
name
the
clause
"
‘
Formerly
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
’
’
and
where
the
words
‘‘
Hudson
’
’
and
"Bay”
of
said
clause
are
displayed
in
extent
and
prominence
no
greater
than
the
said
new
name.
"Provided,
third,
the
representation
of
the
beaver
imbedded
in
the
terrazo
entrance
floor
of
the
store
of
the
HUDSON
BAY
FUR
COMPANY
may
remain
until
the
entrance
is
reconstructed,
at
which
time
it
will
be
removed.
In
any
event
the
same
shall
be
removed
by
January
1st,
1947.”
A
letter
from
the
Inspector
of
Income
Tax,
at
Winnipeg,
to
appellant,
dated
October
21,
1941,
was
filed
as
exhibit
8
;
it
reads
thus
:
"I
wish
to
advise
you
that
in
view
of
the
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Company,
Limited,
case
decision,
legal
expenses
paid
in
connection
with
the
infringement
of
the
Company
name
are
deemed
to
be
capital
and
not
allowable
for
Income
Tax
purposes.
"
"
Accordingly,
revised
assessments
will
be
issued
in
due
course
in
respect
to
the
1936
and
1938
fiscal
periods
of
your
company.
‘
‘
A
notice
of
assessment
dated
October
2,
1940,
for
the
year
1938
was
filed
as
exihibit
9.
The
first
page
thereof,
headed
"‘Dominion
of
Canada
and
Province
of
Manitoba—Notice
of
Assessment—Dominion
and
Manitoba
Income
Tax
for
1938”,
contains
the
following
note:
4
Your
income
for
the
year
above
mentioned
is
hereby
assessed
and
approved
in
the
amount
declared.
All
taxes
have
been
paid
in
accordance
with
receipt(s)
already
issued
to
you.
No
further
payment
is
required.’’
The
second
page
headed
"‘Adjustment
of
income
declared’’
includes
the
following
items,
leaving
aside
the
figures
relating
to
the
Manitoba
income
tax
with
which
we
are
not
concerned:
|
Net
income
declared
|
.
|
$1,507,334.00
|
|
Add
Interest
on
Income
Tax
(Alta.)
|
497.69
|
|
Cost
of
new
cash
registers
(F.T.C.C.)
|
|
|
less
Dep’n.
|
|
4,665.60
|
|
$1,512,497.29
|
These
figures
disclose
the
acceptance
of
the
appellant’s
return
without
raising
the
question
of
the
legal
costs
or
expenses,
as
pointed
out
by
counsel
for
appellant.
Finally
a
copy
of
a
notice
of
assessment,
the
mailing
date
whereof
appears
to
be
the
16th
of
January,
1941,
was
filed
as
exhibit
10.
It
shows
a
taxable
income
of
$1,512,497.29
and
the
tax
of
15%
amounting
to
$226,874.59.
The
summary
dealing
with
the
federal
income
tax
discloses
the
following
amounts:
|
Amount
levied
|
$226,874.59
|
|
Amount
paid
on
A/C
|
$226,874.59
|
Norman
Wilfred
Douglas,
assistant
store
manager
of
appellant’s
store
in
Winnipeg
since
January
1939,
who
had
been
assistant
merchandise
manager
of
its
store
in
Vancouver
from
September
1926
to
June
1937
and
subsequently
store
manager
of
its
store
in
Calgary
from
June
1937
to
January
1939,
declared
that
the
company’s
stores
at
Victoria
and
Vancouver
are
largely
retail
departmental
stores.
He
testified
that
as
assistant
merchandise
manager
in
the
Vancouver
store
he
spent
at
least
75%
of
his
time
in
and
around
the
store
and
not
in
an
office
and
that
he
could
see
tne
customers
who
came
in
from
time
to
time.
Asked
is
he
could
say
if
there
were
customers
from
the
United
States,
Douglas
replied
(p.
11)
:
"‘Well,
having
been
in
the
store
business
for
a
number
of
years
you
sort
of
have
a
second
sense
when
you
see
tourists,
you
can
tell
them
by
their
appearance,
and
Vancouver
being
more
or
less
a
tourist
city,
and
Victoria,
there
was
quite
a
large
amount
of
business
done
with
our
friends
from
the
South.
’
‘
Speaking
of
the
means
of
communication
between
Seattle
and
Vancouver
and
Victoria,
Douglas
stated
that
one
can
come
from
Seattle
to
Vancouver
or
Victoria
by
automobile,
bus,
plane,
train
and
steam-boat.
In
reply
to
a
question
by
counsel
for
appellant
if
he
could
say
the
number
of
tourists
in
1988
and
1939
who
came
from
the
United
States
to
Canada
by
motor
car,
he
stated
(p.
12):
“As
far
as
the
actual
figures
are
concerned
I
couldn’t
say
whether
it
was
five
hundred
thousand
or
five
hundred
and
fifty
thousand,
but
I
do
know
going
back
to
the
time
I
was
in
Vancouver
figures
could
be
had
through
the
Vancouver
Tourist
Bureau,
and
this
is
more
or
less
from
memory
in
the
early
thirties
it
would
be
somewhere
between
four
hundred
thousand
and
five
hundred
thousand
people,
and
that
was
for
motorcar
only.
’
‘
Douglas
declared
that
the
tourist
season
in
Vancouver
and
Victoria
runs
all
through
the
year
but
admitted
that
the
summer
months,
namely
June,
July,
August
and
September,
are
the
largest
tourist
months.
He
asserted
that
he
was
aware
of
a
business
conducted
in
Seattle
under
the
name
of
Hudson’s
Bay
Fur
Company
and
that
associated
with
it
was
a
chap
by
the
name
of
Silver
and
another
one
known
as
‘‘Bronfman,
or
Guttman,
or
some
such
name
as
that’’.
He
said
he
saw
the
original
store
of
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
in
Seattle
in
the
early
part
of
his
stay
in
Vancouver.
According
to
him
the
company
dealt
in
furs
of
all
kinds.
He
understood
that
in
the
later
years
the
company
opened
up
a
curiosity
shop
having
moccasins,
bead
work,
ivory
pieces
and
the
like
such
as
the
appellant
has
carried
on
in
its
various
stores’
museums.
He
added
that
all
the
appellant’s
stores,
depending
on
their
size,
had
historical
museum
pieces,
Indian
work,
bead
work
and
the
like,
but
that
in
the
later
years
these
were
all
assembled
in
the
Winnipeg
store.
Asked
if
from
his
personal
experience
he
had
reason
to
believe
that
there
was
misapprehension
amongst
the
American
tourists
as
to
the
business
carried
on
by
the
appellant
and
the
one
carried
on
by
the
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
at
Seattle,
Douglas
replied
(p.
17):
*
"
Particularly
in
the
summer
period
of
June
to
September
when
we
have
the
largest
number
of
tourists
being
continually
in
the
store
and
up
and
around
the
fur
department,
or
in
the
linen
department,
and
so
on,
you
would
have
these
American
customers
mention
that
they
had
been
in
our
Seattle
Branch,
and
they
were
on
their
way
up
to
Vancouver
and
they
thought
they
would
stop
off
and
see
our
larger
store.
And
this
did
not
happen
just
occasionally,
it
happened
quite
frequently.
At
the
same
time
occasionally
also
they
would
say,
"
When
I
take
this
garment
home
if
I
don’t
like
it
can
I
get
a
refund
on
it
in
Seattle?’
Or,
in
buying
a
fur
coat
it
is
a
sort
of
unwritten
law
that
the
supplier
takes
care
of
the
coat
for
about
a
year
or
a
year
and
a
half
and
oftentimes
you
have
to
make
repairs
on
the
fur
or
lining,
and
so
on,
and
they
would
ask
if
there
is
any
cause
to
have
this
coat
repaired
can
I
have
it
done
in
your
Seattle
store.
’
’
Douglas
stated
that
the
American
tourists
know
that.
Canada
is
not
only
a
producer
of
furs,
but
of
fur
garments,
and
that
certain
types
of
furs
are
cheaper
in
Canada
than
in
the
United
States.
He
noted
that
in
the
thirties
tourists
were
allowed
to
take
from
Canada
into
the
United
States
merchandise
to
the
value
of
$100
per
person.
According
to
him
there
is
a
good
trade
with
the
American
tourists
In
raw
and
dressed
furs
and
in
fur
coats.
He
declared
that
they
were
more
interested
in
the
better
types
of
furs,
such
as
seals,
muskrats,
silver
foxes,
and
also
in
expensive
neck
pieces
and
capes.
He
asserted
that
there
was
an
interference
with
the
appellant’s
trade
by
reason
of
the
business
carried
on
by
the
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
of
Seattle
and
that
it
would
run
into
thousands
of
dollars
over
a
period
of
years.
Douglas
specified
that
tourists
come
from
the
States
of
California
and
Oregon
and
stop
over
in
Seattle
for
a
day
or
two
on
their
way
to
Vancouver,
Seattle
being
the
usual
stopover
for
tourists
en
route.
Replying
to
a
question
as
to
whether
the
misapprehension
previously
referred
to
arose
not
only
in
connection
with
tourists
from
Seattle
but
also
with
tourists
from
all
along
the
coast,
Douglas
said
(p.
21):
"‘I
think
I
can
explain
that
all
that
is
necessary
is
to
be
in
the
Vancouver
store
for
a
while
and
carry
on
conversations
with
tourists
whom
you
meet
in
the
store,
and
you
naturally
find
out
where
they
all
come
from,
and
folks
living
in
Seattle
would
be
a
small
portion
of
those
coming
up
through
Seattle.
there
would
be
as
many
or
more
from
California
as
there
would
be
from
Seattle,
coming
through
there.’’
In
cross-examination
Douglas
admitted
that
the
tourist
business
done
by
the
appellant’s
stores
in
Vancouver
and
Victoria
varies
from
year
to
year.
He
agreed
that
from
1926
to
1929,
the
period
of
boom
days,
there
was
an
increase
in
the
tourist
trade
and
that
in
the
years
following,
during
the
depression,
there
was
considerably
less
business,
until
the
tariff
in
the
United
States
was
changed
so
as
to
allow
tourists
to
take
more
Canadian
merchandise
into
the
United
States
free
of
duty.
According
to
him
this
happened
sometime
in
the
thirties.
He
stated
that
occasionally
tourists
purchasing
furs
in
Vancouver
or
Victoria
would
ask
if
they
could
get
service
and
alterations
in
the
Seattle
store
and
that
they
were
disappointed
when
they
learned
that
it
was
not
a
store
of
the
appellant,
as
they
had
been
given
to
understand,
when
in
Seattle,
that
it
was
a
store
of
the
Hudson’s
Bay
Company.
In
re-examination
Douglas
pointed
out
that
American
tourists
coming
into
Canada
would
benefit
by
the
exchange
on
the
currency.
James
G.
Mundie,
chartered
accountant,
of
Winnipeg,
since
1911,
associated
with
the
firm
of
Riddell,
Stead,
Graham
&
Hutchinson,
former
president
of
the
Manitoba
Institute
and
of
the
Dominion
Association,
admitted
that,
in
dealing
with
expenditures
made
by
a
company,
they
fall
either
into
expenditures
attributable
to
revenue
or
expenditures
attributable
to
capital.
He
was
then
asked
by
counsel
for
appellant
a
question
which
I
think
I
ought
to
quote
verbatim
(p.
26)
:
"I
am
going
to
put
to
you
a
test
which
has
been
suggested
in
a
decided
case,
and
ask
your
opinion
as
to
that
test.
Is
it
a
part
of
the
company’s
working
expenses;
is
it
expenditure
laid
out
as
part
of
the
process
of
profit
earning?
Or,
on
the
other
hand,
is
it
a
capital
outlay;
is
it
expenditure
necessary
for
the
acquisition
of
property
or
of
rights
of
a
permanent
character,
the
possession
of
which
is
a
condition
of
carrying
on
its
trade
at
all?’’
An
objection
was
entered
by
counsel
for
respondent
on
the
ground
that
this
is
a
question
of
law,
in
the
present
case,
and
that
it
is
the
issue
raised
before
the
Court.
Counsel
for
appellant
agreed
that
it
is
largely
a
question
of
law
but
he
said
that
he
will
be
referring
to
cases
in
which
the
evidence
of
a
chartered
accountant
was
admitted
and
that
he
thought
it
prudent
in
the
circumstances
to
submit
the
opinion
of
a
chartered
accountant.
He
summed
up
his
question
as
follows
(p.
27):
•
"Would
you
say
according
to
commercial
principles
of
commercial
accounting
the
principles
laid
down
in
that
test
would
be
true?”
Mundie
answered
in
the
affirmative.
He
supplemented
his
answer
by
stating
that
they
were
the
principles
which
he
would
follow
and
that
they
would
be
applicable
to
legal
expenses,
to
wit
expenses
in
connection
with
the
organization
of
a
company,
or
a
bond
issue,
or
the
refunding
of
a
bond
issue
or
the
acquisition
of
fixed
assets.
Mr.
Burbidge
read
to
Mundie
the
statement
agreed
upon
by
counsel
hereinabove
reproduced
and
asked
him
if
those
litigation
expenses
were
attributable
to
working
expenses
or
to
capital
according
to
commercial
accounting
principles
and
got
this
reply
(p.
28):
"‘I
would
say
to
working
expenses
in
my
opinion.’’
Asked
in
cross-examination
what
he
would
say
about
expenses
to
protect
or
improve
capital
assets,
Mundie
stated
that
it
depends
on
the
nature
of
the
improvement,
but
he
specified
that
an
expense
made
to
protect
a
capital
asset
would
unquestionably
be
a
revenue
charge.
He
agreed
that
if
it
did
actually
improve
the
value
it
is
definitely
capital.
To
a
question
by
counsel
for
appellant
as
to
whether
expenses
to
protect
a
capital
asset,
like
repairs
to
a
building,
would
be
ordinary
revenue
expenses
Mundie
replied
in
the
affirmative.
David
Henry
Laird,
barrister,
of
Winnipeg,
declared
that
the
firm
with
which
he
has
been
associated
have
been
solicitors
for
the
appellant
for
some
twenty
odd
years
and
that
he
personally
has
had
charge
of
the
appellant’s
general
business
to
a
large
extent.
Required
to
let
the
Court
know
the
nature
of
the
appellant’s
business
Laird
made
the
following
detailed
statement
which
I
think
I
had
better
quote
(p.
30)
:
"
1
It
is
a
matter
of
history
the
Company
was
incorporated
in
1670,
to
trade
into
Hudson
Bay,
and
I
think
the
primary
business
was
dealing
in
raw
furs,
chiefly
beaver.
As
the
business
has
developed
over
the
last
one
hundred
years
or
more
they
have
gone
largely
into
the
retail
trade,
and
have
large
departmental
stores
in
Victoria,
Vancouver,
Edmonton,
Calgary,
Saskatoon,
and
Winnipeg,
and
smaller
stores
in
half
a
dozen
other
smaller
towns.
•
•
The
raw
furs
were
largely
accumulated
at
Trading
Posts,
as
they
were
called,
or
Forts,
in
the
North
from
the
native
Indians
or
Esquimeaux,
in
exchange
for
goods
chiefly,
or
sometimes
for
money.
Of
recent
years
the
raw
fur
business
has
grown
extensively
by
the
purchase
for
cash
of
raw
furs
from
various
centers,
for
example,
Vancouver,
Winnipeg,
Regina,
Prince
Albert,
and
they
have
what
they
call
raw
purchasing,
by
buying
furs
from
largely
white
trappers
rather
than
from
the
native
Indians
or
Esquimeaux.
Actually
I
don
‘t
know,
but
I
expect
the
retail
business
has
become
the
largest
end
of
the
business
rather
than
the
fur
trade,
which
was
the
original
business,
but
the
fur
trade
is
still
a
substantial
part
of
the
business,
that
is,
the
raw
fur
business.
‘
‘
Laird
declared
that
the
litigation
in
the
State
of
Washington
regarding
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
was
conducted
under
his
direction
as
solicitor
for
the
Winnipeg
office
of
appellant.
He
said
he
visited
Seattle
in
the
fall
of
1937
with
a
view
to
preparing
for
the
trial.
He
was
present
at
the
hearing
in
May
or
June
1938
at
Tacoma.
He
stated
that
he
was
present
throughout
the
hearing
of
the
evidence.
He
asserted
that
there
have
been
six
or
seven
similar
actions
in
the
United
States
about
which
he
was
consulted
and
he
thought
that
there
were
others
about
which
he
learned
but
in
which
he
did
not
do
any
active
work.
He
added
that
apart
from
actual
suits
there
were
a
number
of
instances
where
the
appellant
sought
to
have
the
name
of
the
firm
carrying
on
business
under
a
name
akin
to
that
of
Hudson’s
Bay
Company
dropped.
Asked
if
the
appellant
had
the
experience,
common
to
other
companies
enjoying
a
good
trade,
of
having
people
copy
their
names
Laird
answered
that
it
is
accentuated
in
the
present
case
because
of
the
long
history
of
the
company
and
of
its
good
reputation.
He
stated
that
the
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
of
Seattle,
basing
his
opinion
on
the
company’s
advertisements
in
the
Seattle
papers,
on
the
city
directories
which
he
personally
checked
and
on
the
evidence
given
in
Court
in
the
present
case,
was
founded
by
the
late
Moritz
Guttman,
about
1902
or
1903.
He
said
that
Guttman
had
been
in
business
dealing
in
raw
furs
in
Victoria,
that
he
checked
the
city
directory
and
found
that
Guttman
was
in
business
there
in
1902.
According
to
him
Guttman,
after
his
wife
died
in
1902,
went
down
to
Seattle.
Laird
asserted
that
he
advertised
for
a
while
as
Hudson’s
Bay
Company,
successor
to
M.
Windmiller,
who,
he
believed,
had
been
a
fur
trade
dealer
.
Laird
declared
that
Guttman
then
incorporated
the
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
in
the
State
of
Washington
in
July,
1904,
and
that
after
Guttman’s
death
his
son,
Addis,
became
president.
He
stated
that
he
met
him
several
times,
as
he
was
present
practically
every
day
at
the
trial.
He
said
he
then
met
Max
Silver,
the
manager,
who
was
a
son-in-law
of
the
late
Mr.
Guttman.
He
stated
that
there
was
a
museum
of
curios
in
the
new
store
of
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
in
Seattle
in
1937,
situated
on
Fifth
Avenue,
the
chief
shopping
district
in
Seattle.
He
gave
a
description
of
the
store
and
of
its
curios
department,
of
which
it
may
be
convenient
to
quote
a
passage
(p.
35)
:
"‘It
was
a
fine
looking
store
from
the
outside.
I
have
photographs
there
in
Court
if
my
friends
are
interested.
Some
were
taken
under
my
direction,
and
others
taken
at
other
times.
The
store
on
the
ground
floor
had
a
frontage
of
fifty
to
sixty
feet,
an
entrance
in
the
centre,
and
the
entrance
recessed
back
And
upstairs
on
the
first
floor
was
this
curio
establishment
which
extended
over
buildings
on
both
sides
north
and
south.
The
curio
part
of
the
business
upstairs
had
probably
a
frontage
of
well
over
one
hundred
feet,
and
ran
back,
I
suppose,
fifty
feet.
I
went
through
that,
was
shown
by
Mr.
Silver
through
the
premises.
They
had
the
usual
Totem
pole
and
curios,
a
lot
of
stuffed
animals
and
skins;
all
sorts
of
Indian
and
Esquimo
work.
They
advertised
it
very
extensively
as
the
largest
curio
establishment
on
the
Pacific
Coast.
’
’
Laird
declared
that
the
appellant
did
not
deal
only
in
fur
garments
but
that
it
also
dealt
largely
in
raw
furs.
He
said
that
he
himself
searched
the
Exchange
records
and
that
he
talked
in
Vancouver
to
the
representative
who
bought
furs
for
them.
He
specified
that
some
of
these
furs
were
dyed
and
dressed
and
that
many
were
made
into
fur
garments;
others,
he
believed,
were
sold
in
their
raw
state.
He
asserted
that
the
appellant
had
considerable
mail
order
business,
that
he
was
shown
the
shipping
room
and
that
he
saw
a
large
number
of
parcels
ready
to
be
shipped
on
the
Pacific
Coast.
Asked
if
prior
to
the
present
suit
there
had
been
negotiations
with
the
Seattle
firm,
Liard
replied
that
there
were
prolonged
negotiations,
that
as
far
back
as
1904
the
appellant
protested,
that
he
saw
a
notice
put
by
the
company
in
the
Seattle
paper
and
that,
when
his
firm
became
solicitors
for
the
appellant,
the
question
of
this
Seattle
concern
was
one
of
the
problems.
Laird
believed
that
there
were
understandings
given
by
the
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
with
respect
to
carrying
on
business
under
that
name.
I
think
I
had
better
quote
an
extract
from
the
deposition
(p.
36)
:
"‘Mr.
Guttman
came
to
Winnipeg
about
the
subject,
and
I
did
not
interview
him
personally,
but
he
interviewed
officials
of
the
Company.
I
saw
correspondence
and
telegrams
from
their
attorneys
that
they
fully
expected
the
name
to
be
changed.
Shareholders’
meetings
were
called,
and
matters
of
that
sort,
and
I
believe
Mr.
Moritz
Guttman
definitely
said
he
would
change
the
name,
but
he
died
and
his
son
and
son-in-law
were
not
so
willing
to
carry
out
his
promises.’’
Laird
said
that
the
action
was
brought
in
April
or
May,
1934.
He
added
that
he
was
consulted
as
to
whether
or
not
interviews
should
be
had
and
that
he
recommended
to
the
appellant’s
general
manager
to
see
Mr.
Silver.
He
believed
that
interviews
took
place
at
Vancouver
towards
the
end
of
1933
or
the
beginning
of
1934.
He
stated
that
the
suit
started
in
the
spring
of
1934
and
was
not
brought
on
to
trial
until
the
spring
of
1938
and
that
there
was
evidence
taken
under
Commission
in
Washington,
New
York
and
Chicago
during
the
first
part
of
1938.
He
pointed
out
that
this
added
to
the
costs
of
litigation,
but
that
it
was
deemed
necessary.
According
to
him
part
of
the
evidence
was
that
the
United
States
Navy
Department
dealt
with
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
of
Seattle
and
brought
supplies
from
them,
believing
that
they
were
the
Hudson’s
Bay
Company
or
a
subsidiary
thereof.
He
asserted
that
he
was
present
at
the
trial
and
heard
the
evidence
which
was
given.
He
stated
that
Mr.
Justice
Cushman
became
ill
and
could
not
continue
with
the
case
and
that
subsequently
he
retired
and
died,
which
explains
the
long
delay
between
the
hearing
in
May,
1938,
and
the
decree
in
January,
1941.
Laird
felt
that
evidence
had
been
adduced
at
the
trial
which
established
the
appellant’s
case.
He
declared
that
witness
after
witness
were
called
to
prove
that
they
had
bought
goods
in
the
store
of
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
in
Seattle
believing
that
they
were
dealing
with
Hudson’s
Bay
Company
or
a
subsidiary
or
affiliated
company.
Referring
to
the
document
exhibit
6
termed
a
stipulation
counsel
for
appellant
asked
the
witness
if
from
this
stipulation
it
appears
that
the
defendant
was
willing
to
submit
to
an
injunction
and
decree;
Laird
answered
affirmatively
and
added
(p.
40)
:
"‘A.
Yes,
and
they
withdrew
the
original
defence.
They
made
some
very
grave
charges
against
the
Hudson’s
Bay
Company,
and
in
the
stipulation
they
withdrew
those
charges
entirely.
I
insisted
upon
that
for
we
could
not
accept
any
decree
by
consent
unless
those
charges
were
withdrawn,
and
they
were
withdrawn
and
struck
out.
"‘Q.
And
from
the
point
of
view
of
the
Hudson’s
Bay
Company,
the
appellant
here,
it
was
wise
to
accept
what
the
defendants
were
willing
to
do
rather
than
incur
very
heavy
expenses
of
continued
litigation
?
"‘A.
I
recommended
that.’’
Laird
declared
that
before
the
war
raw
furs
were
shipped
to
London
and
sold
on
the
market
there
and
that
the
Hudson’s
Bay
fur
auction
sales
were
held
originally
twice
but
latterly
three
times
a
year
and
advertised
all
over
the
world.
He
said
that
since
the
war
that
market
had
been
closed
and
that
to
collect
and
buy
raw
furs
in
Canada
the
company
had
posts
in
the
Northern
country
where
the
furs
are
to
be
found,
in
all
the
Provinces
except
the
Maritime
Provinces,
and
many
of
them
in
the
Northwest
Territories.
He
said
that
the
appellant
has
these
points
where
it
can
acquire
furs
from
the
natives
or
white
trappers
and
ship
them
to
London.
He
stated
that
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
of
Seattle
was
also
engaged
in
the
raw
fur
business,
that
it
advertised
as
having
a
branch
in
Alaska
where
the
appellant
had
been
buying
furs
and
that
it
bought
on
the
Vancouver
Exchange
as
well.
He
noted
that
not
only
was
there
a
sale
of
dressed
furs
interfering
with
the
appellant’s
trade
but
that
the
raw
fur
business
was
also
an
interference
with
it
by
the
use
of
the
name.
In
cross-examination
Laird
acknowledged
that
in
the
pleadings
in
the
Seattle
case
there
is
a
reference
to
a
subsidiary
of
the
appellant
company
incorporated
in
the
State
of
New
York.
Asked
if
he
was
familiar
with
the
income
tax
returns
of
Hudson
Bay
Company
he
replied
that
he
has
been
consulted
about
various
items
but
was
not
prepared
to
say
that
he
was
familiar
with
it.
These
subjects
do
not
appear
to
me
to
have
any
relevance
to
the
matter
at
issue.
Counsel
for
appellant
stated
that
there
are
profits
earned
in
Great
Britain,
which
are
segregated
and
do
not
appear
in
the
Canadian
balance
sheet.
He
further
stated
that
the
Canadian
balance
sheet
contains
the
Canadian
business
and
the
Newfoundland
business,
but
that
the
profits
of
the
latter
are
segregated
from
the
earnings
of
the
Canadian
business.
He
also
declared
that
the
proportion
of
the
income
earned
by
the
appellant
which
came
from
the
Canadian
business
amounted
to
95%
in
1937,
97%
in
1938
and
92%
in
1939.
He
said
that
the
income
earned
in
Great
Britain
and
in
Newfoundland
is
not
included
in
the
appellant’s
income
tax
returns
involved
herein
and
is
accordingly
not
charged
any
taxes
in
Canada.
This
closed
the
appellant’s
case.
Counsel
for
respondent
did
not
call
any
witnesses.
It
is
perhaps
convenient
to
quote
the
definition
of
income
contained
in
sec.
3
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
although
the
case
rests
principally,
nay
exclusively,
on
the
determination
of
what
incomes
are
not
liable
to
taxation.
The
definition
reads
thus
:
il
.
.
‘income’
means
the
annual
net
profit
or
gain
or
gratuity,
whether
ascertained
and
capable
of
computation
as
being
wages,
salary,
or
other
fixed
amount,
or
unascertained
as
being
fees
or
emoluments,
or
as
being
profits
from
a
trade
or
commercial
or
financial
or
other
business
or
calling,
directly
or
indirectly
received
by
a
person
from
any
office.
or
employment,
or
from
any
profession
or
calling,
or
from
any
trade,
manufacture
or
business,
as
the
case
may
be
whether
derived
from
sources
within
Canada
or
elsewhere;
and
shall
include
the
interest,
dividends
or
profits
directly
or
indirectly
received
from
money
at
interest
upon
any
security
or
without
security,
or
from
stocks,
or
from
any
other
investment,
and,
whether
such
gains
or
profits
are
divided
or
distributed
or
not,
and
also
the
annual
profit
or
gain
from
any
other
source
.
.
.
.
”
Sec.
6,
under
the
heading
"‘deductions
from
income
not
allowed
’
’,
enacts
inter
alia
:
“
(1)
In
computing
the
amount
of
the
profits
or
gains
to
be
assessed,
a
deduction
shall
not
be
allowed
in
respect
of
;
‘fi.”.
,
.
:
1.
":l.
C.T.C.
HUDSON’s
Bay
Co.
v.
M.N.R.
111
(a)
disbursements
or
expenses
not
wholly,
exclusively
and
necessarily
laid
out
or
expended
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
income;
(b)
any
outlay,
loss
or
replacement
of
capital
or
any
payment
on
account
of
capital
or
any
depreciation,
depletion
or
obsolescence,
except
as
otherwise
provided
in
this
Act.’’
Can
the
expenses
or
costs
paid
out
by
the
appellant
in
the
circumstances
hereinabove
related
be
considered
as
disbursements
or
expenses
"‘wholly,
exclusively
and
necessarily
laid
out
or
expended
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
income’’?
This
is
the
question
which
I
have
to
solve.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
in
his
argument
pointed
out
that
the
Minister,
assisted
by
a
very
able
staff,
did
not
think
at
first
that
there
was
any
objection
to
the
legal
costs
and
expenses
in
issue
being
deducted
from
the
income
and
the
return
was
accepted.
He
submitted
that
it
was
only
when
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
in
the
case
of
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.
[1940-41]
C.T.C.
155
was
rendered
that
the
Minister
changed
his
mind,
reopened
the
assessment
and
disallowed
the
deduction
of
the
said
costs
and
expenses.
Counsel
intimated
that
the
reassessment
was
made
on
an
erroneous
view
of
what
was
decided
in
the
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.
ease
and
that,
if
the
case
of
Income
Tax
Commissioner
v.
Singh
[1942]
1
All
E.R.
262
had
been
decided
before
the
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.
case,
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
in
the
latter
case
might
have
been
different.
Counsel
suggested
that
the
Supreme
Court
thought
that
they
were
compelled
to
give
judgment
against
their
own
opinions,
possibly
because
they
considered
themselves
bound
by
some
remarks
of
the
Privy
Council.
He
drew
the
conclusion
that
it
is
clear,
according
to
the
judgment
in
the
case
of
Income
Tax
Commissioner
v.
Singh,
that
the
Privy
Council
did
not
intend
to
lay
down
any
such
rule
as
that
suggested
in
the
Supreme
Court
judgment.
Counsel
for
respondent
on
the
other
hand
relied
on
the
case
of
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.,
among
several
others,
and
it
seems
convenient
to
analyse
it
first.
The
respondent
company
since
1904
had
supplied
natural
gas
to
the
inhabitants
of
the
Township
of
Barton
under
a
by-law
granting
rights
for
that
purpose
and
before
and
after
that
date
has
been
developing
gas
fields
and
supplying
gas
to
the
inhabit-
ants
of
other
municipalities.
Since
1904
parts
of
the
township
were
at
different
times
annexed
to
the
City
of
Hamilton.
The
respondent
continued
to
supply
the
annexed
territory
with
natural
gas
as
before
annexation.
The
United
Gas
and
Fuel
Company
of
Hamilton
Limited,
hereinafter
called
The
United
Company,
had
since
1904
been
supplying
the
City
of
Hamilton,
as
it
was
before
the
annexations,
and
its
inhabitants
with
manufactured
gas
under
authority
granted
by
by-laws
of
the
City.
About
1930
the
United
Company
made
a
claim
under
these
bylaws
that
it
had
the
exclusive
right
to
sell
gas
in
the
City
of
Hamilton,
including
the
annexed
districts,
and
that
the
respondent
had
no
competing
rights.
Under
authority
conferred
by
an
agreement
between
the
City
of
Hamilton
and
the
United
Company
dated
March
24,
1931,
confirmed
by
statute
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
(21
Geo.
V,
c.
100),
the
United
Company
in
1931
took
action
in
its
own
name
and
in
the
name
of
the
City
of
Hamilton,
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario,
against
respondent
claiming:
a
declaration
that
the
respondent
was
wrongfully
maintaining
its
mains
in
the
streets,
public
squares
and
lanes
in
the
City
of
Hamilton
and
supplying
gas
to
the
inhabitants
thereof
;
an
injunction
restraining
the
respondent
from
continuing
so
to
do;
a
mandatory
order
requiring
respondent
to
remove
its
mains
and
other
property
from
the
streets,
public
squares,
lanes
and
other
places
of
the
City
of
Hamilton;
damages.
The
respondent
company
defended
the
action,
which
in
due
course
came
on
for
trial
and
was
dismissed.
Appeals
by
the
United
Company
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
of
Ontario
and
to
the
Privy
Council
were
dismissed.
The
costs
of
this
litigation
paid
by
the
respondent
amounted
to
$48,560.94
after
crediting
all
sums
recovered
from
the
United
Company
as
taxable
costs.
In
its
Income
Tax
return
for
1934
the
respondent
company
deducted
from
its
taxable
income
this
sum
of
$48,560.94.
This
deduction
was
disallowed
and
the
respondent
company’s
assessment
increased
accordingly.
The
company
appealed
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
who
dismissed
the
appeal.
The
company
thereupon
appealed
to
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
and
this
appeal
was
allowed.
The
Minister
appealed
to
the
Supreme
Court
and
the
latter
reversed
the
judgment
of
the.
Exchequer
Court,
holding
unanimously
that
the
legal
expenses
in
question
were
not
deductible.
The
judgment
of
the
Chief
Justice,
Sir
Lyman
Duff,
and
of
Davis,
J.
was
delivered
by
the
former.
At
page
158
of
the
report
we
find
the
following
observations
:
"There
are
two
broad
grounds
upon
which
I
think
the
Minister
is
entitled
to
succeed.
First,
in
order
to
fall
within
the
category
‘disbursements
or
expenses
wholly,
exclusively
and
necessarily
laid
out
or
expended
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
income’,
expenses
must,
I
think,
be
working
expenses
;
that
is
to
say,
expenses
incurred
in
the
process
of
earning
‘the
income’.
The
judgment
of
Lord
Clyde
in
Lothian
Chemical
Co.
v.
Rogers
((1926)
II
Tax
Cases
908,
at
521)
seems
to
point
to
the
material
distinction.
The
passage
is
pertinent,
because
the
words
Lord
Clyde
is
applying
are
more
comprehensive
than
those
of
sec.
6(a).”
The
Chief
Justice
then
quotes
an
extract
from
the
notes
of
Lord
Clyde,
which
have
some
pertinence
although
not
exactly
in
point.
Reference
thereto
may
be
useful
but
they
are
too
extensive
to
reproduce
herein.
Duff,
C.J.
then
continues
as
follows:
“Similar
language
is
used
by
Lord
Clyde
in
Addie
9
s
case
(Robert
Addie
&
Sons
9
Collieries
Ltd.
v.
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners
[1924]
S.C.
231
at
285)
and
was
approved
and
applied
by
Lord
Macmillan
in
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
Judicial
Committee
in
Tata
v.
Income
Tax
Commissioner
[1937]
A.C.
685).
Under
s.
10(2)
of
the
Indian
Income
Tax
Act
the
profits
or
gains
of
any
business
carried
on
by
the
assessee
are
to
be
computed
after
making
allowance
for
‘
(ix)
any
expenditure
(not
being
in
the
nature
of
capital
expenditure)
incurred
solely
for
the
purpose
of
earning
such
profits
or
gains’.”
There
follows
a
passage
from
the
reasons
of
Lord
Macmillan
which
are
interesting
and
of
which
it
may
be
expedient
to
reproduce
an
extract
(p.
159)
:
“
‘Their
Lordships
recognize,
and
the
decided
cases
show,
how
difficult
it
is
to
discriminate
between
expenditure
which
is,
and
expenditure
which
is
not,
incurred
solely
for
the
purpose
of
earning
profits
or
gains.
.
.
.
In
the
case
of
Robert
Addie
&
Sons’
Collieries,
Ltd.
v.
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
(
[1924]
S.C.
231
at
235),
the
Lord
President
(Clyde),
dealing
with
corresponding
words
in
the
British
Income
Tax
Act,
says:
"'What
is
‘money
wholly
and
exclusively
laid
out
for
the
purposes
of
the
trade’
is
a
question
which
must
be
determined
upon
the
principles
of
ordinary
commercial
trad-
ing.
It
is
necessary,
accordingly,
to
attend
to
the
true
nature
of
the
expenditure,
and
to
ask
oneself
the
question,
Is
it
a
part
of
the
Company’s
working
expenses;
is
it
expenditure
laid
out
as
part
of
the
process
of
profit
earning?’’
Adopting
this
test,
their
Lordships
are
of
opinion
that
the
deduction
claimed
by
the
appellants
is
inadmissible
as
not
being
expenditure
incurred
solely
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
profits
or
gains
of
the
business
carried
on
by
the
appellants.
‘
’
Duff,
C.J.
notes
that
the
distinction
is
also
explained
in
the
judgment
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
for
New
Zealand
in
a
passage
approved
by
the
Judicial
Committee
of
the
Privy
Council
in
Ward
&
Co.
v.
Commissioner
of
Taxes
[1923]
A.C.
145
at
149.
Further
on
the
learned
Judge
adds
(p.
160)
:
"Again,
in
my
view,
the
expenditure
is
a
capital
expenditure.
It
satisfies,
I
think,
the
criterion
laid
down
by
Lord
Cave
in
British
Insulated
&
Helsby
Cables
Ltd.
v.
Atherton
([1926]
A.C.
205
at
213).
The
expenditure
was
incurred
‘once
and
for
all’
and
it
was
incurred
for
the
purpose
and
with
the
effect
of
procuring
for
the
company
‘the
advantage
of
an
enduring
benefit’.
The
settlement
of
the
issue
raised
by
the
proceedings
attacking
the
rights
of
the
respondents
with
the
object
of
excluding
them
from
carrying
on
their
undertaking
within
the
limits
of
the
City
of
Hamilton
was,
I
think,
an
enduring
benefit
within
the
sense
of
Lord
Cave’s
language.”
The
Chief
Justice
then
refers
to
the
observations
of
Lord
Macmillan
in
Van
den
Berghs
Ltd.
v.
Clark
[1935]
A.C.
431
at
p.
440
reading
as
follows
(p.
160)
:
“Lord
Atkinson
indicated
that
the
word
‘asset’
ought
not
to
be
confined
to
‘something
material’
and,
in
further
elucidation
of
the
principle,
Romer,
L.J.
has
added
that
the
advantage
paid
for
need
not
be
‘of
a
positive
character’
and
may
consist
in
the
getting
rid
of
an
item
of
fixed
capital
that
is
of
an
onerous
character:
Anglo-Persian
Oil
Co.
v.
Dale
([1932]
1
K.B.
146).”’
The
Chief
Justice
then
points
out
what
the
character
of
the
expenditure
is
in
the
following
words:
“The
character
of
the
expenditure
is
for
our
present
purposes,
I
think,
analogous
to
that
of
the
expenditure
in
question
in
Moore
v.
Hare
(1914-1915
S.C.
91),
where
promotion
expenses
incurred
by
coalmasters
in
connection
with
two
parliamentary
bills
giving
authority
to
construct
a
line
to
serve
the
coalfield
were
held
to
be
capital
expenditures.”
The
Chief
Justice
concludes
thus
(p.
161)
:
"‘I
do
not
perceive
any
distinction
between
expenditures
incurred
in
procuring
the
company’s
by-laws
authorizing
the
undertaking
and
the
expenses
incurred
in
their
litigation
with
the
City
of
Hamilton.
4
"
In
the
ordinary
course,
it
is
true,
legal
expenses
are
simply
current
expenditure
and
deductible
as
such;
but
that
is
not
necessarily
so.
The
legal
expenses
incurred,
for
example,
in
procuring
authority
for
reduction
of
capital
were
held
by
the
Court
of
Sessions
not
to
be
deductible
in
Thomson
v.
Batty
([1919]
S.C,
289).”’
Mr.
Justice
Crocket
expressed
the
following
opinion
(p.
161)
:
"
"
If
we
were
free
to
decide
this
appeal
on
considerations
of
practical
business
sense
and
equity,
or
to
deduce
from
decided
cases
the
governing
rule,
which
should
be
applied
in
determining
whether
the
respondent
was
or
was
not
entitled,
under
the
formula
prescribed
by
s.
6
of
the
Canadian
Income
War
Tax
Act,
to
the
deductions
claimed
in
computing
its
assessable
profits
or
gains
for
the
year
1943,
I
should
have
no
hesitation
in
adopting
the
conclusion
at
which
the
learned
President
of
the
Exchequer
Court
arrived
and
the
reasons
he
has
given
therefor.
We
are
confronted,
however,
with
a
recent
judgment
of
the
Judicial
Committee
of
the
Privy
Council
in
the
case
of
the
appeal
of
Tata
Hydro-Electric
Agencies,
Ltd.,
Bombay
v.
Commissioner
of
Income
Tax,
Bombay
Presidency
and
Aden
([1937]
A.C.
685)
in
which
a
test,
formulated
in
1924
by
Lord
President
Clyde
of
the
Seottish
Court
of
Sessions
in
the
case
of
Robert
Addie
&
Sons’
Collieries,
Ltd.
v.
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
([1924]
S.C.
231),
for
determining
whether
a
deduction
is
allowable
under
practically
identical
provisions
of
the
English
Income
Tax
Act,
1918,
is
expressly
adopted
and
applied.
The
English
Act
of
1918,
c.
40,
8
&
9
Geo.
V,
by
rule
3
of
Schedule
‘D‘,
prohibits
deductions
in
respect
of
‘any
disbursements
or
expenses,
not
being
money
wholly
and
exclusively
laid
out
or
expended
for
the
purposes
of
the
trade,
profession,
employment
or
vocation’,
or
in
respect
of
"
any
capital
withdrawn
from,
or
any
sum
employed
or
intended
to
be
employed
as
capital
in
such
trade’,
etc.,
as
well
as
other
specified
capital
expenditures
for
improvements
and
the
like,
the
effect
of
which,
as
regards
this
case,
it
seems
to
be
impossible
to
distinguish
from
the
prohibitions
(a)
and
(b)
of
s.
6
of
the
Canadian
Act.
I
apprehend,
therefore,
that
the
test
so
distinctly
adopted
by
the
Judicial
Committe
in
the
Tata
case
([1937]
A.C.
685)
is
binding
upon
us.’’
After
making
some
comments
on
the
judgment
of
the
House
of
Lords
in
Strong
&
Co.
v.
Woodifield
[1906]
A.C.
448;
5
Rep.
of
Tax
Cases
215,
and
especially
to
the
notes
of
Lord.
Davey,
Crocket,
J.
made
the
following
observations
(p
163)
:
"‘Singularly
enough,
it
was
apparently
upon
this
dictum
of
Lord
Davey,
and
not
that
of
the
Lord
Chancellor,
concurred
in
by
Lords
Macnaghten
and
Atkinson,
that
Lord
President
Clyde
of
the
Court
of
Session
in
the
Addie
case
([1924]
S.C.
231),
formulated
the
test,
which
the
Judicial
Committee
adopted
13
years
later
in
the
Tata
case
([1937]
A.C.
685).
See
Lord
Clyde’s
judgment
in
the
Court
of
Session,
Session
Cases
(1924),
at
the
bottom
of
p.
235.
"‘In
any
event,
we
must
now
recognize
the
rule
as
expressly
affirmed
by
the
Judicial
Committee
of
the
Privy
Council,
and
determine
whether
the
expenditure
in
question
in
this
appeal
was
wholly
and
exclusively
made
by
the
respondent
as
part
of
the
process
of
profit
earning.
Being
unable
to
convince
myself
that
the
expenditure
falls
within
this
strict
formula,
I
have
reluctantly
concluded
that
the
appeal
must
be
allowed.
‘
‘
The
late
President
of
the
Exchequer
Court,
Maclean,
J.,
after
summarizing
the
facts
and
commenting
on
certain
decisions,
among
which
we
find
Anglo-Persian
Oil
Co.
v.
Dale
[1932]
1
K.B.
124;
Ward
c
Co.
v.
Corner
of
Taxes
[1923]
A.C.
145,
made
in
his
judgment
[1940-41]
C.T.C.
144
at
p.
153,
the
following
observations
which
seem
to
me
pertinent
:
‘‘It
seems
to
me
that
if
legal
expenses
are
incurred
in
successfully
defending
an
action
in
which
one’s
title
to
existing
assets,
rights
or
facilities
are
put
in
serious
question,
such
expenses
should
normally
be
admissible
as
deductions,
and
particularly
would
this
be
so
in
the
case
where
the
earning
of
profits
are
directly
dependent
upon
and
require
the
utilization
of
such
assets,
rights
or
facilities,
as
was
the
case
here.
If
the
action
is
unsuccessfully
defended
the
revenue
authorities
might
contend
that
there
was
no
asset,
right
or
facility
to
defend,
and
that
therefore
such
expenses
should
not
be
allowed
as
a
deduction
in
computing
net
taxable
income,
but
that
is
not
this
case.
If
such
expenses
arose
out
of
the
promotion
or
acquisition
of
additional
assets,
rights
or
facilities,
it
is
probable
no
deduction
would
be
permissible.
It
was
imperative
here
that
the
Dominion
Company
defend
the
action
and
the
failure
of
its
directors
to
do
so
would
probably
have
rendered
themselves
liable
in
damages
to
the
shareholders
of
that
company.
The
action
threatended
the
earnings
of
the
ominion
Company,
wholly
or
partially,
and
had
the
action
succeeded
it
would
have
been
unable
to
sell
gas,
at
least
in
some
sections
of
the
City
of
Hamilton;
the
company’s
capacity
to
earn
revenue
was
put
in
jeopardy
and,
I
think,
it
is
immaterial
that
its
capital
assets,
or
some
of
them,
were
incidentally
threatened
with
extinction
or
depreciation.
It
was
because
the
Dominion
Company
was
producing
and
selling
gas
that
it
had
to
defend
the
action
and
thus
protect
and
preserve
its
credit
and
its
revenue.
The
United
Company
sought
an
injunction
restraining
the
Dominion
Company
from
continuing
to
supply
gas
to
the
inhabitants
of
the
City
of
Hamilton,
which,
had
the
United
Company
been
successful,
would
have
prevented
the
Dominion
Company
from
earning
its
usual
revenue.”
Like
Mr.
Justice
Crocket
in
his
reasons
I
may
note
that
the
attention
of
the
late
President
apparently
was
not
called
to
the
decision
in
Tata
Hydro-Electric
Agencies
Ltd.
v.
Com
9
r
of
Income
Tax
as
he
made
no
reference
to
it.
The
judgment
of
Mr.
Justice
Crocket
adds
that
no
mention
of
it
was
made
either
in
appellant’s
nor
in
respondent’s
factum,
although
Mr.
Varcoe
cited
it
in
his
argument.
It
is
comprehensible
in
the
circumstances
that
the
late
President
may
not
have
been
aware
of
it.
Whether
the
perusal
of
this
decision
would
have
modified
his
opinion
is
a
matter
of
mere
supposition
which
I
do
not
feel
disposed
to
adopt.
It
was
urged
by
counsel
for
appellant
that
the
Supreme
Court
reversed
the
decision
of
the
late
President
of
the
Exchequer
Court
because
they
felt
bound
by
the
decisions
in
the
cases
of
Robert
Addie
c
Sons’
Collieries
Ltd.
v.
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners,
8
Rep.
of
Tax
Cases
671;
Lothian
Chemical
Co.
v.
Rogers,
11
Rep.
Tax
Cases
509;
Tata
Hydro-Electric
Agencies
Lid.
v.
Com
9
r
of
Income
Tax
[1937]
A.C.
685;
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables
Ltd.
v.
Atherton
[1926]
A.C.
205.
A
few
brief
observations
about
these
decisions
may
be
apposite.
In
the
Addie
v.
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners
ease
it
will
suffice
to
quote
the
head-note
which
is
fully
comprehensive
(p.
671)
:
"Under
the
terms
of
a
mineral
lease,
a
colliery
company
was
obliged
to
restore
to
an
arable
state
all
ground
occupied
by
it
or
damaged
by
its
workings,
or,
at
its
option,
to
pay
the
lessor
for
all
such
ground
not
so
restored,
at
the
rate
of
thirty
years’
purchase
of
the
agricultural
value
thereof.
In
the
exercise
of
its
option,
the
company
paid
the
lessor
a
sum
of
£6,104,
as
representing
the
value
of
the
damaged
lands.
^Held,
that
such
payment
was
in
the
nature
of
capital
ex-
penditure,
and
was
not
therefore
a
proper
deduction
in
computing
the
company’s
liability
to
Income
Tax.”
I
do
not
think
that
this
case
offers
any
similarity
with
the
present
one
and
that
it
has
any
pertinence.
In
the
Lothian
Chemical
Co.
case
the
facts
were
as
follows:
During
the
war
the
appellant
company
manufactured
explosives
for
the
Minister
of
Munitions
but
owing
to
the
dangerous
situation
of
the
works
this
was
discontinued
and
in
October
1917
an
arrangement
was
entered
into
with
the
Minister,
ultimately
embodied
in
an
agreement
dated
April
22,
1918,
under
which
the
•company
agreed
to
convert
its
plant
and
works
into
a
plant
suitable
for
the
manufacture
of
calcium
nitrate
to
be
sold
to
the
Minister
on
stated
terms.
The
Minister
undertook
to
recoup
to
the
company
the
cost
of
conversion
up
to
a
maximum
of
£15,000,
which
was
the
company’s
estimate
of
the
cost.
The
converted
works,
except
any
existing
plant
and
buildings
and
the
land,
were
to
be
the
property
of
the
Minister,
with
an
option
to
the
company
within
three
months
from
the
determination
of
the
agreement
to
purchase
the
works
at
a
valuation
and,
if
such
option
was
not
exercised,
an
option
to
the
Minister
within
twelve
months
to
remove
the
buildings,
plant
and
machinery,
so
far
as
his
property,
or
to
purchase
the
company’s
interest
in
the
land
and
buildings,
etc.,
not
his
property.
None
of
the
options
in
the
agreement
was
exercised
at
its
termination
and
eventually
the
works
and
plant
belonging
to
the
Minister,
of
little
value
to
the
company,
were
taken
over
by
the
latter
for
£400.
Owing
to
rises
in
wages
and
cost
of
materials
during
the
progress
of
the
work
the
cost
of
conversion
exceeded
the
£15,000
paid
by
the
Minister
by
£4,044,
of
which
a
sum
of
£1,897
was
recovered
from
the
Minister
in
settlement
of
an
action
which
had
been
commenced
against
him,
and
the
net
deficiency
of
£2,165
was
claimed
by
the
company
as
a
deduction
in
arriving
at
its
profits
for
the
purposes
of
Income
Tax
and
Excess
Profits
Duty.
It
was
held
that
the
loss
in
question
was
a
loss
of
capital
and
was
not
admissible
as
a
deduction
from
the
company’s
profits.
This
decision
does
not
seem
to
me
to
be
more
pertinent
than
the
previous
one.
It
unquestionably
deals
with
a
loss
of
capital.
The
following
case,
Tata
Hydro-Electric
Agencies
Ltd.
v.
Commissioner
of
Income
Tax
(ubi
supra),
differs
in
nature
from
the
two
previously
referred
to
where
the
Court
of
Session
(Scotland)
held,
in
the
first,
that
the
payment
of
a
sum
representing
the
value
of
damaged
lands
and,
in
the
second,
that
the
loss
in
the
cost
of
conversion
of
a
plant
and
works
were
a
loss
of
capital.
In
this
case
the
appellant
was
a
private
limited
company
carrying
on
the
business
of
managing
agents
of
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.
and
other
hydro-electric
companies.
The
company
acquired
this
agency
business
from
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
under
an
assignment
whereby
the
latter
transferred
to
the
appellant
their
rights
and
interest
as
agents
of
the
hydro-electric
companies
under
their
subsisting
agreement
with
them,
but
subject,
as
to
to
their
rights
and
interest
under
their
agreement
with
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.,
to
their
obligations
under
two
agreements
with
F.
E.
Dinshaw
Ltd.
and
Richard
T.
Smith.
The
assignment
declared
that
the
appellant
should
thenceforth
be
and
act
as
the
agents
of
the
hydro-electric
companies
and
be
entitled
to
all
benefits
conferred
by
the
agreement
between
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
and
these
companies
and
should
perform
all
the
obligations
thereby
imposed
and
that
the
appellant
should
receive
all
the
commissions
to
which
the
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
were
entitled
thereunder.
The
appellant
agreed
to
carry
out
the
conditions
of
the
agreements
with
F.
E.
Dinshaw
Ltd.
and
Richard
T.
Smith
and
to
indemnify
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
against
any
consequences
of
the
non-observance
thereof.
Under
the
agency
agreement
between
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
and
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.
the
benefit
whereof
the
appellant
acquired,
the
remuneration:
of
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
for
their
services
consisted
of
a
commission
of
10%
on
the
annual
net
profits
of
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.,
with
a
minimum
of
Rs.
50,000
whether
the
company
should
make
any
profits
or
not,
and
they
were
entitled
to
have
their
expenses
reimbursed.
In
return
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
undertook
to
endeavour
to
promote
the
interests
of
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.
The
agreement
was
declared
assignable
and
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.
undertook
to
recognize
any
assignees
as
its
agents
and,
if
required,
to
enter
into
an
identical
agreement
with
such
assignees.
In
1926
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.
being
in
need
of
financial
assistance,
Tata
Sons
Ltd.,
its
then
managing
agents,
approached
IF’.
E.
Dinshaw
Ltd.
and
Richard
T.
Smith,
who
agreed
to
provide
the
necessary
funds.
One
of
the
conditions
on
which
they
agreed
to
do
so
was
that
in
addition
to
the
interest
payable
by
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.
for
the
loan,
they
should
each
receive
from
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
two
annas
in
the
rupee
or
1212%
of
the
commission
earned
by
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
under
their
agreement
with
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.
Agreements
were
entered
into
between
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
and
F.
E.
Dinshaw
Ltd.
and
between
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
and
Richard
T.
Smith
dated
October
15
and
19,
1926,
respectively.
After
the
acquisition
of
the
agency
business
by
the
appellant
the
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.,
in
fulfilment
of
its
obligation
under
the
agreement
with
Tata
Sons
Ltd.,
entered
into
a
new
agency
agreement
with
the
appellant
in
terms
identical
with
those
of
its
previous
agreement
with
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
and
the
appellant
also
entered
into
agreements
with
F.
E.
Dinshaw
Ltd.
and
the
administrator
of
the
estate
of
Richard
T.
Smith,
who
had
died
in
the
meantime,
in
terms
identical
with
those
of
the
previous
agreements
between
Tata
Sons
Ltd.
and
these
parties.
By
these
transactions
the
appellant
came
in
the
place
and
stead
of
Tata
Sons
Ltd.,
both
as
regards
the
right
to
receive
from
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.
the
agency
remuneration
and
as
regards
the
obligation
to
pay
out
of
its
remuneration
121
%
to
F.
E.
Dinshaw
and
1212%
to
the
administrator
of
Richard
T.
Smith’s
estate.
The
assessment
of
appellant’s
income
for
the
fiscal
year
to
March
31,
1934,
is
based
on
its
income,
profits
and
gains
for
the
year
1932
and
the
question
is
whether
in
the
computation
for
tax
purposes
of
its
income,
profits
and
gains
for
that
year
it
is
entitled
to
deduct
a
sum
representing
the
25%
of
the
commission
earned
and
received
from
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.
which
it
paid
to
F.
E.
Dinshaw
Ltd.
and
Richard
T.
Smith’s
administrator.
It
was
held
that
in
computing
its
income,
profits
and
gains
the
appellant
was
not
entitled
to
deduct
the
25%
in
question;
that
this
percentage
of
the
commission
paid
to
F.
EK.
Dinshaw
Ltd.
and
the
administrator
of
Richard
T.
Smith’s
estate
was
not
expenditure
incurred
by
appellant
"
"
solely
for
the
purpose
of
earning
.
.
.
profits
or
gains’’
of
its
business;
that
the
obligation
to
make
the
payments
was
undertaken
by
appellant
in
consideration
of
its
acquisition
of
the
right
and
opportunity
to
earn
profits,
i.e.,
of
the
right
to
conduct
the
business,
and
not
for
the
purpose
of
producing
profits
in
the
conduct
of
the
business.
This
decision,
to
my
mind,
has
very
little,
if
any,
weight
in
the
present
instance.
In
the
case
of
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables
Ltd,
v.
Atherton
(ubi
supra),
the
appellant,
a
company
carrying
on
the
business
of
manufacturers
of
insulated
cables,
established
a
pension
fund
for
its
clerical
and
technical
staff.
The
fund
was
constituted
by
a
trust
deed
which
provided
that
members
should
contribute
a
percentage
of
their
salaries
to
the
fund
and
that
the
company
should
contribute
an
amount
equal
to
half
the
contributions
of
the
members;
and
further
that
the
company
should
contribute
a
sum
of
£31,784
to
formithe
nucleus
of
the
fund
and
provide
the
amount
necessary
in
order
that
past
years
of
service
of
the
then
existing
staff
should
rank
for
pension.
This
sum
was
arrived
at
by
an
actuarial
calculation
on
the
basis
that
the
sum
would
ultimately
be
exhausted
when
the
object
for
which
it
was
paid
was
attained.
On
the
winding
up
of
the
fund
the
whole
amount
was
to
be
distributed
among
the
members.
The
company,
having
paid
the
sum
of
£31,784
out
of
current
profits,
claimed
that
it
was
an
admissible
deduction
in
computing
its
profits.
It
was
held
by
Viscount
Cave,
L.C.,
Lord
Atkinson
and
Lord
Buckmaster,
Lord
Carson
and
Lord
Blanes-
burgh
dissenting,
that
this
payment
was
in
the
nature
of
capital
expenditure
and
accordingly
not
an
admissible
deduction.
I
may
note
that
the
House
of
Lords
in
this
case
affirmed
by
a
majority
of
three
against
two
the
order
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
(Pollock,
M.R.,
Warrington,
L.J.
and
Scrutton,
L.J.),
which
had
reversed
an
order
of
Rowlatt,
J.
of
the
Court
of
King’s
Bench.
Opinions
diverged
widely,
as
is
often
the
case;
I
may
say
with
all
due
deference,
that
the
reasons
of
Lord
Blanesburgh,
who
dissented,
elaborate
and
careful,
steadily
support
the
view
contrary
to
that
adopted
by
the
majority
of
the
Court.
At
all
events
I
am
satisfied,
after
a
careful
perusal
of
it,
that
this
case
has
no
bearing
on
the
one
now
pending,
as
the
facts
differ
materially.
In
the
case
of
Ward
and
Co.
v.
Commissioner
of
Taxes
[1923]
A.C,
145
it
appears
from
the
report
that
a
poll
of
the
voters
in
New
Zealand
being
about
to
be
held
on
the
question
whether
or
not
prohibition
of
intoxicants
should
be
introduced,
a
brewery
company
expended
money
in
printing
and
distributing
antiprohibition
literature.
The
poll
resulted
in
a
small
majority
against
prohibition
and
the
company
sought
to
deduct
the
expenditure
from
the
income
derived
from
its
business
for
the
purposes
of
the
Land
and
Income
Tax
Act,
1916,
of
New
Zealand.
Under
sec.
86,
subsec.
1(a),
of
the
Act
no
deduction
is
allowed
in
respect
of
expenditures
"‘not
exclusively
incurred
in
the
production
of
the
assessable
income’’.
It
was
held
by
the
Privy
Council
that
the
company
was
not
entitled
to
make
the
said
deduction
having
regard
to
the
provision
of
said
sec.
86,
subsec.
1(a).
Viscount
Cave,
L.C.,
who
delivered
the
judgment
of
the
Court,
expressed
the
following
opinion
(p.
149)
:
"‘The
expenditure
in
question
was
not
necessary
for
the
production
of
profit,
nor
was
it
in
fact
incurred
for
that
purpose.
It
was
a
voluntary
expense
incurred
with
a
view
to
influencing
public
opinion
against
taking
a
step
which
would
have
depreciated
and
partly
destroyed
the
profit-bearing
thing.
The
expense
may
have
been
wisely
undertaken,
and
may
properly
find
a
place,
either
in
the
balance
sheet
or
in
the
profit-and-
loss
account
of
the
appellants;
but
this
is
not
enough
to
take
it
out
of
the
prohibition
in
s.
86,
sub-s.
1(a),
of
the
Act.
For
that
purpose
it
must
have
been
incurred
for
the
direct
pur-
pose
of
producing
profits.
’
‘
Dealing
with
this
case
Kerwin,
J.
in
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.
made
the
following
comments
(p.
164
([1940-41]
C.T.C.)):
‘“The
cases
referred
to
on
the
argument
deal
with
expressions
used
in
other
statutes
and
certainly,
so
far
as
clause
(a)
is
concerned,
I
have
been
unable
to
derive
any
assistance
from
them.
Ward
and
Co.
v.
Commissioner
of
Taxes
[1923]
A.C.
145
was
determined
on
the
wording
of
the
New
Zealand
Act
there
in
question
‘in
the
production
of
the
assessable
income’.
In
view
of
the
fact
that
that
wording
is
less
liberal
and
comprehensive
than
the
wording
in
our
statute
‘laid
out
or
expended
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
income’,
the
decision
is,
I
think,
inapplicable.”
In
his
judgment
in
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
[1940-41]
C.T.C.
144,
Maclean,
J.,
after
stating
that
considerable
reliance
has
been
placed
by
counsel
for
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
on
the
case
of
Ward
and
Co.
v.
Commissioner
of
Taxes
(ubi
supra)
and
after
relating
the
facts
as
hereinabove
set
forth,
added
(p.
151)
:
“It
was
held
by
the
New
Zealand
Court
of
Appeal
that
no
deduction
was
allowable
in
respect
of
such
an
expenditure
because
it
was
‘not
exclusively
incurred
in
the
production
of
the
assessable
income
.
.
.
,’
which
decision
was,
on
appeal
to
the
Judicial
Committee
of
the
Privy
Council,
sustained,
their
Lordships
holding
that
the
expenditure
was
a
voluntary
expense
incurred
with
a
view
to
influencing
public
opinion,
and
not
one
necessary
for
the
production
of
profit,
and
that
it
was
not
in
fact
incurred
for
that
purpose.
I
should
not
have
thought
myself
that
any
other
conclusion
was
possible,
but
at
any
rate
it
is
not,
in
my
opinion,
an
authority
applicable
to
the
state
of
facts
here.’’
The
learned
Judge
then
made
the
following
remarks
of
a
broader
character
which
seem
to
me
apposite
{ibid)
:
“No
distinction
is
to
be
drawn
between
legal
expenses
and
other
business
expenses.
The
question
always
is
whether
the
expense
was
a
necessary
one
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
annual
net
profit
or
gain
of
the
taxpayer.
In
the
well
known
case
of
Usher’s
Wiltshire
Brewery
Ltd.
v.
Bruce
([1915]
A.C.
433
at
487)
legal
expenses
were
allowed
as
a
deduction.
In
that
case
these
expenses
consisted
of
‘solicitors
costs
and
disbursements
in
respect
of
the
renewal
of
publicans’
licences
or
tenancy
agreements,
the
assessments
of
tied
houses,
obtaining
a
full
licence,
complaints
against
tenants,
and
advising
as
to
thefts
of
beer’.
There
is
little
discussion
in
the
speeches
of
their
Lordships
concerning
the
particular
deduction
claimed
for
legal
expenses,
and,
in
fact,
it
would
appear
that
no
objection
was
taken
by
the
Attorney-General
against
their
allowance.
The
legal
expenses
were
held
to
be
a
proper
debit
in
ascertaining
the
balance
of
profit
and
loss
in
the
taxpayer’s
trade.”
The
last
five
cases,
on
which
counsel
for
respondent
placed
so
much
reliance,
being
set
aside,
we
remain
with
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court,
which
is
certainly
more
in
point.
Another
case
which
also
has
some
pertinence
is
that
of
Anglo-
Persian
Où
Co.
v.
Dale
[1932]
1
K.B.
124
in
which
the
King’s
Bench
Division
of
the
High
Court
of
Justice
(Lord
Hanworth,
M.R.,
Lawrence
and
Romer,
LL.J.)
confirmed
the
judgment
of
Rowlatt,
J.
who
had
reversed
the
decision
of
the
Commissioners
of
Income
Tax.
I
may
note
that
Mr.
Justice
Crocket
and
the
late
President
of
the
Exchequer
Court,
in
the
case
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.,
made
some
appropriate
and
interesting
remarks
relating
thereto.
The
facts
were
briefly
as
follows
:
The
Anglo-Persian
Oil
Co.,
incorporated
in
1909
with
the
object
of
raising,
refining,
selling
and
otherwise
dealing
with
crude
oil
and
its
products
in
Persia
and
elsewhere,
entered
into
an
agreement
in
May
1914
with
Strick,
Scott
and
Co.
Ltd.
under
which
the
latter
were
appointed
agents
of
the
company
to
manage
its
business
in
Persia
and
the
East
and
carry
out
the
sale
of
petroleum
and
other
products
thereof
for
a
term
of
ten
years.
The
remuneration
under
the
agreement
having
proved
to
be
more
onerous
than
anticipated,
the
company
decided
to
bring
the
agency
to
an
end
and
thenceforth
to
do
its
own
agency
work.
Accordingly
in
1922
the
company
entered
into
an
agreement
with
Strick,
Scott
and
Co.
by
which
it
was
agreed
that
the
agency
should
be
terminated,
that
the
latter
should
go
into
liquidation
and
should
not
act
in
or
about
any
business
connected
with
petroleum
at
Mohammerah
in
Persia
while
in
return
the
company
should
pay
Strick,
Scott
and
Co.
Ltd.
£300,000.
The
£300,000
was
paid
and
the
agency
terminated.
This.
sum
was
treated
in
the
company’s
accounts
as
a
revenue
payment
and
charged
to
revenue
in
instalments
of
£60,000
for
five
years.
The
company
claimed
that
this
course
was
correct
and
justified
the
deduction
of
the
£300,000
from
its
annual
expenses
in
seeking
the
profits
and
gains.
The
Inspector
of
Taxes
disputed
this
course
and
claimed
that
the
£300,000
ought
to
be
treated
as
an
expenditure
on
capital
account,
an
expenditure
which
brought
to
an
end
an
onerous
contract
and
secured
to
the
company
a
freedom
from
charges
which
would
have
continued
for
some
years.
The
Commissioners
accepted
the
Inspector’s
argument
and
held
that
the
sum
of
£300,000
was
not
an
admissible
deduction
in
computing
the
profits
and
gains
of
the
company
for
the
year
ending
March
31,
1923,
and
adjusted
the
figures
of
assessments
for
the
years
ending
April
5,
1923,
1924,
1925
and
1926
accordingly.
Rowlatt,
J.
held
that
the
sum
was
an
admissible
deduction.
His
judgment
was
affirmed.
The
headnote
of
the
King’s
Beneh
Division,
precise
and
comprehensive,
sums
up
the
decision
thus
(p.
124)
:
"
4
On
appeal
:—
"‘Held,
applying
the
test
laid
down
by
Lord
Cave,
L.C.
in
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables
v.
Atherton
[1926]
A.C.
205,
213,
that
the
payment
in
question
did
not
bring
any
asset
into
existence
and
could
not
properly
be
said
to
have
brought
into
existence
an
advantage
for
the
benefit
of
the
Company’s
trade
within
the
meaning
of
that
expression
as
used
by
Lord
Cave.
‘‘Held,
therefore,
that
the
payment
was
a
revenue
payment
and
was
deductible
by
the
company
in
ascertaining
its
net
profits.
"‘Test
of
whether
the
money
was
provided
from
fixed
or
circulating
capital
adopted
in
Hancock
v.
General
Reversionary
and
Investment
Co.
[1919]
1
K.B.
25;
Mitchell
v.
B.
W.
Noble,
Ltd.
[1927]
1
K.B.
719;
and
Mallett
v.
Staveley
Coal
&
Iron
Co.
[1928]
2
K.B.
405
applied.
°
Decision
of
Rowlatt,
J.
affirmed.”
Lord
Hanworth,
after
stating
that
it
was
argued
that
the
finding
of
the
Commissioners
ought
to
be
accepted
as
one
of
fact
within
their
own
sphere
and
so
not
the
subject
of
appeal
as
a
question
of
law,
that
this
argument
is
not,
to
his
mind,
well
founded,
that
the
cases
upon
the
point
of
what
is
attributable
to
revenue
and
what
to
capital
account
run
upon
fine
lines
of
distinction,
that
the
Commissioners
have
to
direct
themselves
correctly
upon
the
questions
of
law
involved,
that
the
deductions
that
are
"permissible
must
be
examined
from
the
point
of
view
of
law,
that
they
cannot
be
said
to
be
simply
questions
of
fact
irrespective
of
the
principles
of
law
and
that
it
is
accordingly
necessary
to
consider
the
principles
upon
which
items
have
been
held
to
belong
to
capital
or
revenue
and
the
characteristics
which
have
been
held
to
turn
a
particular
item
into
one
category
or
the
other
and
that
certain
illustrations
can
be
given
of
items
that
have
been
held
to
fall
on
one
side
of
the
line
or
the
other,
made
a
brief
but
fairly
exhaustive
review
of
a
number
of
cases
in
which
the
question
had
been
determined
and
concluded
that
(p.
139)
:
1
"
Upon
this
survey
of
the
cases
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
Commissioners
have
not
asked
themselves
the
right
question,
and
have
not
directed
themselves
aright
on
this
difficult
point
of
law.
The
consequent
result
is
that
I
think
it
is
open
for
the
Court
to
express
its
opinion
in
law.
"‘Then,
as
Rowlatt,
J.
points
out,
there
is
no
evidence
of
the
purchase
of
the
goodwill
of
some
business,
nor
is
there
any
trace
of
a
payment
to
start
a
business.
The
payment
is
to
put
an
end
to
an
expensive
method
of
carrying
on
the
business
which
remains
the
same
whether
the
distributive
side
is
in
the
hands
of
the
respondents
themselves,
or
of
their
agents.’’
Romer,
L.J.,
who
concurred
with
his
colleagues
in
the
affirmation
of
the
judgment
of
Rowlatt,
J.,
dealing
with
the
deductions
permissible
under
the
law,
made
the
following
observations
(p.
144)
:
"
"
Towards
the
solution
of
this
problem
little,
if
any,
assistance
is
afforded
by
the
Income
Tax
Act.
It
is,
indeed,
provided
by
s.
209
that
in
arriving
at
the
amount
of
profits
or
gains
for
the
purpose
of
income
tax,
no
other
deductions
are
to
be
made
than
such
as
are
expressly
enumerated
in
the
Act.
But,
as
has
often
been
pointed
out,
the
Act
nowhere
enumerates
the
deductions
that
may
be
made.
It
merely
prohibits
the
making
of
certain
specified
deductions.
Nor
is
it
to
be
taken
that
any
deduction
may
legitimately
be
made
that
is
not
expressly
prohibited
by
r.
3
to
Cases
I
and
II
under
Sch.
D,
or
that
deductions
are
to
be
limited
to
those
expressly
excepted
from
the
prohibitions
in
that
rule.
‘
‘
Further
on
the
learned
Judge
added
(p.
145)
:
"‘So
far
as
the
Act
itself
is
concerned,
one
is,
therefore,
left
without
guidance
as
to
the
deductions
that
are
permissible,
but
with
the
mind
somewhat
unsettled
by
reason
of
the
list
of
prohibited
deductions
as
to
what,
in
the
view
of
the
Legislature,
is
to
be
considered
for
the
purposes
of
income
tax
the
balance
of
the
profits
or
gains.’’
After
stating
that
in
the
circumstances
it
is
not
surprising
that
the
cases
in
which
the
Court
has
been
called
upon
to
say
whether
some
particular
deduction
is
or
is
not
permissible
should
have
been
numerous
and
not
always
easy
to
reconcile
with
others
wherein
the
facts
were
similar
and
then
passing
to
the
year
1925
when
all
these
authorities
were
considered
by
the
House
of
Lords
in
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables
Ltd.
v.
Atherton
and
the
law
applicable
to
such
cases
placed
beyond
the
realms
of
controversy,
Romer,
L.J.
observed
that
the
boundary
line
between
deductions
that
were
permissible
and
those
that
were
not
had
previously
been
uncertain
and
difficult
to
follow,
that
as
regards
the
large
majority
of
deductions
there
could
be
no
conceivabe
doubt,
they
being
clearly
on
one
side
of
the
line
or
the
other
but,
as
regards
a
comparatively
small
number,
it
was
difficult
to
say
on
which
side
of
the
line
they
fell.
He
pointed
out
that
this
is
particularly
the
case
where
an
expenditure
is
not
a
recurring
one
but
is
made
once
and
for
all.
I
believe
I
had
better
quote
a
passage
from
the
reasons
of
Romer,
L.J.
(p.
145)
:
"‘It
was
pointed
out
by
Lord
Cave
in
Atherton’s
case
[1926]
A.C.
205,
213,
that
an
expenditure,
though
made
once
and
for
all,
may
nevertheless
be
treated
as
a
revenue
expenditure,
and
he
then
added
this:
‘But
when
an
expenditure
is
made,
not
only
once
and
for
all,
but
with
a
view
to
bringing
into
existence
an
asset
or
an
advantage
for
the
enduring
benefit
of
a
trade,
I
think
that
there
is
very
good
reason
(in
the
absence
of
special
circumstances
leading
to
an
opposite
conclusion)
for
treating
such
an
expenditure
as
properly
attributable
not
to
revenue
but
to
capital?
It
should
be
remembered,
in
connection
with
this
passage,
that
the
expenditure
is
to
be
attributed
to
capital
if
it
be
made
‘with
a
view’
to
bringing
an
asset
or
advantage
into
existence.
It
is
not
necessary
that
it
should
have
that
result.
It
is
also
to
be
observed
that
the
asset
or
advantage
is
to
be
for
the
‘enduring’
benefit
of
the
trade.
I
agree
with
Rowlatt,
J.
that
by
‘enduring’
is
meant
‘enduring
in
the
way
that
fixed
capital
endures’.
An
expenditure
on
acquiring
floating
capital
is
not
made
with
a
view
to
acquiring
an
enduring
asset.
It
is
made
with
a
view
to
acquiring
an
asset
that
may
be
turned
over
in
the
course
of
trade
at
a
comparatively
early
date.
Nor,
of
course,
need
the
advantage
be
of
a
positive
character.
The
advantage
may
consist
in
the
getting
rid
of
an
item
of
fixed
capital
that
is
of
an
onerous
character,
as
was
pointed
out
by
this
Court
in
Mallett
v.
Staveley
Coal
&
Iron
Co.
[1928]
2
K.B.
405.”
In
the
case
of
Mitchell
v.
II.
W.
Noble
Ltd.
[1927]
1
K.B.
719
it
was
held
by
the
Court
of
Appeal,
affirming
the
judgment
of
Rowlatt,
J.,
that
the
payment
of
a
sum
of
money
to
get
rid
of
a
director
in
order
to
save
the
company
from
scandal
must
be
regarded
as
money
‘‘wholly
and
exclusively
laid
out
and
expended
for
the
purposes
of
the
trade”
of
the
company.
It
was.
also
held
that
as
the
payment
was
not
made
to
secure
an
actual
asset
so
as
to
increase
the
capital
of
the
company
but
was
made
in
order
to
enable
the
directors
to
carry
on
the
business
of
the
company
as
they
had
done
in
the
past,
unfettered
by
the
presence
of
the
retiring
director,
which
might
have
a
bad
effect
on
the
credit
of
the
company,
it
must
be
treated
as
an
income
and
not
as
a
capital
expenditure
and
was
accordingly
deductible
for
income
tax
purposes.
We
find
at
page
737
of
the
report
the
following
comments
by
Lord
Hanworth,
M.R.:
"I
do
not
in
the
least
wish
to
go
back
upon
anything
I
said
myself
in
the
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables
case,
[1926]
A.C,
205,
but
it
appears
to
me,
upon
the
facts
of
this
case,
that
this
payment
should
be
treated
as
a
revenue
item
and
not
as
a
capital
item.
It
seems
to
attain
more
closely
to
the
pay-
ments
in
Hancock’s
case,
[1919]
1
K.B.
25,
and
Smith’s
ease,
[1914]
3
K.B.
674,
than
to
those
in
the
other
cases
such
as
Ounsworth
v.
Vickers,
Ltd.,
[1915]
3
K.B.
267,
and
the
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables
case,
[1926]
A.C.
205,
itself.
It
was
a
payment
made
in
the
course
of
business,
with
reference
to
a
particular
difficulty
which
arose
in
the
course
of
the
year,
and
was
made
not.
in
order
to
secure
an
actual
asset
to
the
company
but
to
enable
the
company
to
continue
to
carry
on,
as
it
had
done
in
the
past,
the
same
type
and
high
quality
of
business,
unfettered
and
unimperilled
by
the
presence
of
one
who,
if
the
public
had
known
about
his
position,
might
have
caused
difficulty
in
its
business
and
whom
it
was
necessary
to
deal
and
settle
with
at
once.”
In
the
case
of
Rhodesia
Railway,
Ltd.
v.
Collector
of
Income
Tax
[1933]
A.C.
368
the
report
discloses
that
the
company
had
in
one
year
expended
a
large
sum
of
money
in
replacing
rails
and
sleepers
or
ties.
In
making
its
income
return
the
appellant
debited
a
sum
of
£252,174
under
the
heading
‘‘renewals
of
permanent
way’
and
showed
a
loss
for
the
year
over
all
of
£97,445.
In
the
notice
of
assessment
the
Income
Tax
Collector
wrote
back
the
item
of
£252,174
deducted
by
the
appellant,
thereby
converting
the
loss
of
£97,445
into
a
profit
of
£154,729.
The
appellant
objected
to
the
assessment
in
respect
of
the
disallowance
of
the
deduction
of
£252,174
for
renewals
of
permanent
way.
The
respondent
having
overruled
the
objection
the
company
appealed.
It
was
held
by
the
Judicial
Committee
of
the
Privy
Council,
reversing
the
judgment
of
the
Special
Court
of
the
Bechuanaland
Protectorate,
that
the
appellant
company
was
entitled
to
the
deductions
claimed
because
the
sum
expended
was
an
outgoing
"‘not
of
a
capital
nature’’
and
was
‘‘expended
for
repairs
of
property
occupied
for
the
purpose
of
trade
or
in
respect
of
which
income
is
receivable”.
Lord
Macmillan,
who
delivered
the
judgment
of
the
Privy
Council,
stated
(p.
374)
:
“The
periodical
renewal
be
sections
of
the
rails
and
sleepers
or
a
railway
line
as
they
wear
out
by
use
is
in
no
sense
a
reconstruction
of
the
whole
railway
and
is
an
ordinary
incident
of
railway
administration.
The
fact
that
the
wear
although
continuous
is
not
and
cannot
be
made
good
annually
does
not
render
the
work
of
renewal
when
it
comes
to
be
effected
necessarily
a
capital
charge.
The
expenditure
here
in
question
was
incurred
in
consequence
of
the
rails
having
been
worn
out
in
earning
the
income
of
previous
years
on
which
tax
had
been
paid
without
deduction
in
respect
of
such
wear,
and
represented
the
cost
of
restoring
them
to
a
state
in
which
they
could
continue
to
earn
income.
It
did
not
result
in
the
creation
of
any
new
asset;
it
was
incurred
to
maintain
the
appellants’
existing
line
in
a
state
to
earn
revenue.
’
’
The
decision
of
the
House
of
Lords
in
the
case
of
Usher’s
Wiltshire
Brewery,
Lid.
v.
Bruce
[1915]
A.C.
433
although
perhaps
not
so
apposite
as
the
preceding
ones,
may
be
consulted
with
advantage.
It
will
suffice
to
quote
an
extract
of
the
head-
note
which
is
fairly
accurate
and
complete:
‘““A
brewery
company,
as
a
necessary
incident
of
the
profitable
working
-of
their
brewery
business,
acquired
and
owned
licensed
houses
which
they
let
to
tied
tenants,
who,
in
consideration
of
the
tie,
paid
a
rent
less
than
the
full
annual
value.
The
tenants
were
under
an
agreement
to
repair
and
to
pay
rates
and
taxes,
but
the
company
in
fact
did
the
repairs
and
paid
the
rates
and
taxes
in
order
to
avoid
loss
of
tenants.
The
company
also
in
respect
of
these
houses
paid
premiums
on
insurances
against
fire
and
loss
of
licences
and
incurred
legal
expenses
in
connection
with
the
renewal
of
the
licences
and
otherwise.
All
these
sums
were
solely
and
exclusively
expended
or
allowed
by
the
brewery
company
for
the
purposes
of
their
business
:—
‘‘Held
that,
in
estimating
the
balance
of
the
profits
of
their
business
for
the
purposes
of
assessment
to
income
tax,
the
brewery
company
were
entitled
to
deduct
all
these
sums
as
expenses
necessarily
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
profits.
Brickwood
&
Co.
v.
Reynolds
[1898]
1
Q.B.
95
overruled.
"Decision
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
[1914]
2
K.B.
891
reversed.’’
There
are
two
cases
in
which
the
judgments
were
delivered
subsequently
to
the
hearing
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
the
case
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.
These
cases,
in
my
opinion,
offer
as
much
relevancy
to
the
problem
at
issue
herein
as
those
previously
referred
to
and
they
certainly
deserve
being
noted.
The
first
of
these
cases
is
that
of
Southern
v.
Borax
Consolidated,
Ltd.
[1940]
4
All
E.R.
412.
The
respondent
purchased
certain
property
for
the
purposes
of
its
business.
Subsequently
an
action
was
taken
against
the
company
claiming
that
its
title
was
invalid.
The
company
defended
the
action
and
incurred
legal
expenses
amounting
to
£6,249,
which
it
claimed
to
be
entitled
to
deduct
as
business
expenses
in
computing
its
profits
for
the
purposes
of
assessment
to
income
tax.
The
Crown
contended
that
the
action
concerned
the
capital
assets
of
the
company
and
was
contested
in
order
to
preserve
the
existence
of
those
assets
and
that
the
sum
of
£6,249
was
a
capital
expense.
The
King’s
Bench
Division
(Lawrence,
J.)
held
that
the
expense
had
been
incurred,
not
in
creating
any
new
asset,
but
in
maintaining
the
title
to
the
company’s
property
and
was,
therefore,
an
expense
wholly
and
exclusively
incurred
for
the
purposes
of
the
company’s
trade
and,
as
such,
properly
deductible.
Lawrence,
J.,
after
reviewing
the
precedents
cited
by
counsel,
concluded
as
follows
(p.
419)
:
"
"
It
appears
to
me
that
the
legal
expenses
which
were
incurred
by
the
respondent
company
did
not
create
any
new
asset
at
all,
but
were
expenses
which
were
incurred
in
the
ordinary
course
of
maintaining
the
assets
of
the
company,
and
the
fact
that
it
was
maintaining
the
title,
and
not
the
value,
of
the
company
’s
business
does
not
make
it
any
different.”
The
second
ease
is
Income
Tax
Commissioner
v.
Singh
(exactly
Maharajadhiraj
Sir
Rameshwar
Singh
of
Darbhanga)
[1942]
1
All
E.R.
362.
In
this
case
the
Judicial
Committee
of
the
Privy
Council
affirmed
the
judgment
of
the
High
Court
of
Judicature
at
Patna,
India,
which
had
decided
a
reference
made
to
it,
at
the
request
of
the
respondent,
in
favour
of
the
latter.
The
summary
of
the
judgment,
fairly
comprehensive
and
exact,
may
advantageously
be
quoted:
"‘The
respondent’s
father
made
a
loan
of
10
lakhs
of
rupees
to
a
company
in
which
he
was
a
shareholder,
and
recovered
this
loan
in
an
action,
the
costs
of
which
were
allowed
as
an
expense
incurred
in
his
moneylending
business
in
the
assessment
of
his
income
tax.
Certain
shareholders
in
the
company
brought
an
action
against
the
respondent’s
father
and
others
for
conspiracy,
collusion,
misrepresentation,
and
breach
of
contract.
The
basis
of
this
action
was
an
alleged
transaction,
of
which
the
loan
was
part,
whereby
the
respondent’s
father
agreed
to
finance
and
manage
the
company.
The
action
was
dismissed,
the
version
of
what
took
place
relied
upon
by
the
plaintiffs
being
found
to
be
completely
false.
The
respondent’s
father
died
before
the
conclusion
of
the
suit,
and
the
respondent
who
continued
his
business
claimed
to
deduct
the
costs
in
arriving
at
the
assessment
of
profits.
The
appellant
contended
that
there
was
no
connection
between
the
loan
and
the
alleged
transaction
which
was
the
basis
of
the
action
against
the
respondent’s
father,
the
action
being
of
a
personal
character
and
unrelated
to
his
business
as
a
moneylender
:—
""Held:
the
respondent
was
entitled
to
make
the
deduction
claimed.
The
allegations
against
the
respondent’s
father
were
built
up
upon
the
transaction
in
which
the
loan
was
made,
and
the
defence
of
the
action
was
necessary
for
the
protection
of
his
rights
as
the
creditor
in
the
loan.’’
Lord
Thankerton,
who
delivered
the
judgment
of
the
Court,
stated
(p.
365,
in
fine)
:
"'Their
Lordships
are,
therefore,
of
opinion
that
the
facts
stated
by
the
commissioner
cannot
justify
the
opinion
expressed
by
him,
but
that
the
expenditure
in
question
was
incurred
solely
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
profits
or
gains
of
the
moneylending
business,
and
that
the
High
Court
are
right
in
holding
the
respondent
entitled
to
the
deduction
claimed
and
in
answering
the
question
of
law
asked
by
the
commissioner
in
favour
of
the
respondent.
’
’
The
Jurisprudence
in
the
United
States
holds
the
same
views:
Citron-Byer
Co.
v.
Commissioner
of
Internal
Revenue,
21
B.T.A,
308;
Kornhauser
v.
United
States,
276
U.S.R.
145;
National
Outdoor
Advertising
Bureau,
Inc.
v.
Ilelvering,
89
Fed.
Rep.
(2d)
878.
In
the
cases
of
Montreal
Coke
and
Manufacturing
Co.
and
Montreal
Light,
Heat
and
Power
Cons.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
[1944]
Canada
Tax
Cases
94
in
which
the
Privy
Council
affirmed
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court,
which
by
a
majority
had
affirmed
the
judgment
of
Maclean,
J.
disallowing
deductions
for
expenditure
made
by
appellants
in
connection
with
the
redemption
of
existing
bonds
before
maturity
and
the
reborrowing
of
the
sums
paid
out
at
lower
rates
on
less
onerous
conditions
as
to
repayment,
with
a
view
to
reducing
their
interest
charges,
alluded
to
by
counsel
but
without
insistence,
differ
materially
with
the
present
case
and
have
practically
no
bearing
on
it.
Nevertheless
a
passage
from
the
notes
of
Lord
Macmillan,
who
delivered
the
judgment
of
the
Privy
Council,
may
be
useful
(p.
100)
:
7
It
is
obvious
that
there
can
be
many
forms
of
expenditure
designed
to
increase
income
which
would
not
be
appropriate
deductions
in
ascertaining
annual
net
profit
or
gain.
The
statutory
criterion
is
a
much
narrower
one.
Expenditure
to
be
deductible
must
be
directly
related
to
the
earning
of
income.
The
earnings
of
a
trader
are
the
product
of
the
trading
operations
which
he
conducts.
.
.
.
It
is
not
the
business
of
either
of
the
appellants
to
engage
in
financial
operations.
The
nature
of
their
businesses
is
sufficiently
indicated
by
their
titles.
It
is
to
these
businesses
that
they
look
for
their
earnings.
Of
course,
like
other
business
people,
they
must
have
capital
to
enable
them
to
conduct
their
enterprises,
but
their
financial
arrangements
are
quite
distinct
from
the
activities
by
which
they
earn
their
income.’’
Further
on
Lord
Macmillan
added
:
‘‘It
was
conceded
in
the
Courts
in
Canada,
and
in
any
event
it
is
clear,
that
the
expenses
incurred
by
the
appellants
in
originally
borrowing
the
money
represented
by
the
bonds
subsequently
redeemed
were
properly
chargeable
to
capital
and
so
were
not
incurred
in
earning
income.
If
the
bonds
had
subsisted
to
maturity
the
premiums
and
expenses
then
payable
on
redemption
would
plainly
also
have
been
on
capital
account.
Why
then
should
the
outlays
in
connection
with
the
present
transactions,
compendiously
described
as
‘refunding
operations
‘
not
also
fall
within
the
same
category
Their
Lordships
are
unable
to
discern
any
tenable
distinction.”
The
various
Income
Tax
Acts
considered
in
the
aforesaid
cases,
apart
from
that
of
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.,
based
on
the
Canadian
Income
War
Tax
Act,
contain
provisions
fundamentally
similar,
regarding
deductions
not
allowable,
to
the
Canadian
Act.
A
difference
however
between
the
foreign
acts
referred
to
in
the
decisions
pre-cited
and
our
own
is
that
in
para.
(a)
of
sec.
6
of
the
Canadian
Income
War
Tax
Act
the
adverb
‘‘necessarily’’
has
been
added
to
the
adverbs
""wholly”
and
“exclusively”
which
are
also
found
in
the
other
acts.
This
adverb
‘‘necessarily’’
was
inserted
in
the
statute
by
13-14
Geo.
V,
c.
52,
sec.
3.
I
do
not
believe
that
it
adds
any
strength
to
the
paragraph.
I
do
not
know
if
the
intimation
by
counsel
for
appellant
that
the
Supreme
Court
in
the
case
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.
reversed
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
feeling
that
it
was
bound
to
do
so
by
the
decisions
in
the
ease
of
The
Lothian
Chemical
Co.
v.
Rogers,
Robert
Addie
&
Sons’
Collieries
Ltd.
v.
Inland
Revenue
Corners,
Tata
Hydro-
Electric
Agencies
Ltd.
v.
Com
9
r
of
Income
Tax,
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables
Ltd.
v.
Atherton
and
Ward
and
Co.
v.
Com
9
r
of
Taxes
is
justified.
It
appears
from
the
report
that
these
cases
were
fully
considered,
commented
on
and
accepted
by
the
Court
as
authorities.
I
may
note
that
the
doctrine
has
evolved
appreciably
since
these
judgments
were
rendered.
Having
previously
reviewed
them,
I
shall
only
make
now
a
few
brief
remarks.
Now
in
the
two
first
ones
it
was
held,
on
facts
widely
different
from
those
forming
the
basis
of
the
case
in
appeal,
that
the
expenses
and
costs
incurred
were
in
the
nature
of
capital
expenditures
or
loss
of
capital.
These
cases
do
not
seem
to
me
to
have
any
relevance
to
the
matter
in
issue.
In
the
third
case,
Tata
Hydro-Electric
Agenvies
Ltd.
v.
Com
9
r
of
Income
Tax,
the
Privy
Council
held
that
in
computing
its
income
for
tax
purposes
the
appellant
was
not
entitled
to
deduct
the
25%
of
the
commission
received
from
Tata
Power
Co.
Ltd.
and
paid
over
to
F.
E.
Dinshaw
Ltd.
and
Richard
T.
Smith
under
certain
agreements,
as
this
percentage
of
the
commission
so
paid
was
not
expenditure
incurred
by
appellant
‘‘solely
for
the
purpose
of
earning
.
.
.
profits
or
gains’’
of
its
business,
and
that
the
obligation
to
make
the
payments
was
undertaken
by
appellant
in
consideration
of
its
acquisition
of
the
right
and
opportunity
to
make
profits,
that
was,
of
the
right
to
conduct
the
business,
and
not
for
the
purpose
of
producing
profits
in
the
conduct
of
the
business.
This
case
differs
substantially
from
the
present
one
and
I
do
not
think
that
it
has
any
application.
The
fourth
case
relied
upon
by
the
Supreme
Court
is
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables
Ltd.
v.
Atherton,
in
which
there
was,
as
already
stated,
a
considerable
difference
of
opinion.
The
House
of
Lords
maintained,
by
a
majority
of
three
to
two,
the
judgment
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
which
had
unanimously
reversed
the
judgment
of
Rowlatt,
J.
in
the
King’s
Bench
Division.
I
have
previously
reviewed
the
decision
of
the
Privy
Council
and
I
do
not
deem
it
useful
to
deal
with
it
anew,
except
perhaps
to
point
out
briefly
that
the
Court
held
that,
when
an
expenditure
is
ineurred
"‘once
and
for
all”
with
a
view
to
bringing
into
existence
an
asset
or
advantage
for
the
enduring
benefit
of
a
trade,
there
is
very
good
reason
for
treating
such
an
expenditure
as
propertly
attributable
not
to
revenue
but
to
capital.
We
are
not
faced
with
this
problem
in
the
present
case.
What
we
are
concerned
with
is
not
an
expenditure
laid
out
for
the
creation
or
acquisition
of
an
asset
but
one
made
to
protect
and
safeguard
an
asset
already
in
existence.
The
last
case
referred
to
by
the
Supreme
Court
is
Ward
and
Co.
v.
Corner
of
Taxes
in
which
the
Judicial
Committee
of
the
Privy
Council
affirmed
the
judgment
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
of
New
Zealand
holding
that
a
sum
expended
by
appellant,
a
brewery
company,
in
printing
and
distributing
anti-prohibition
literature
in
connection
with
a
poll
of
voters
being
about
to
be
held
on
the
question
as
to
whether
or
not
prohibition
of
intoxicants
should
be
introduced
is
not
an
expenditure
which
may
be
deducted
from
the
company’s
income
derived
from
its
business,
as
not
being
an
expenditure
exclusively
incurred
in
the
production
of
the
assessable
income,
as
enacted
by
sec.
86,
subsec.
1(a)
of
the
Land
and
Income
Tax
Act,
1916,
of
New
Zealand.
This
decision
1s,
in
my
judgment,
irrelevant
and
inapplicable.
At
the
outset
of
his
argument
counsel
for
respondent
reiterated
his
admission
that
Hudson’s
Bay
Company
did
a
substantial
business
with
American
tourists
and
said
he
was
also
prepared
to
admit
that
the
company
took
proceedings,
incurred
the
costs
in
question
herein
and
paid
them.
It
was
submitted
on
behalf
of
respondent
that
the
fact
of
the
Commissioner
having
twice
accepted
and
verified
the
appellant’s
return,
including
the
deduction
of
said
costs,
did
not
prevent
him
from
reassessing
if
he
thought
fit.
This
power
is
given
him
by
see.
55
of
the
Act,
which
reads
thus:
"
"
Notwithstanding
any
prior
assessment,
.
.
.
the
taxpayer
shall
continue
to
be
liable
for
any
tax
and
to
be
assessed
therefor
and
the
Minister
may
at
any
time
assess,
re-assess
or
make
additional
assessments
upon
any
person
for
tax,
interest
and
penalties.
’
‘
I
may
note
incidentally
that
this
section
was
repealed
and
another
one
substituted
therefor
by
8-9
George
VI,
c.
43,
sec.
15,
which
limited,
rightly
so
in
my
opinion,
the
time
for
reassessment,
save
in
the
case
of
misrepresentation
or
fraud
when
it
is
left
indefinite,
to
six
years.
This
seems
sufficiently
long
for
the
Minister
to
become
aware
of
the
taxpayer’s
financial
status.
On
the
other
hand,
in
all
fairness
and
equity
the
uncertainty
of
the
taxpayer
regarding
his
indebtedness
to
the
Treasury
should
not
be
unduly
prolonged.
I
agree
with
counsel
for
respondent’s
statement
that
the
Minister,
notwithstanding
any
previous
assessments,
may
reassess
as
often
as
he
wishes,
subject
however,
I
may
add,
to
the
right
of
the
Court
to
affirm,
vary
or
disallow
the
final
assessment.
Replying
to
counsel
for
appellant’s
submission
that
the
defence
as
set
forth
in
the
statement
of
defence
is
too
wide,
counsel
for
respondent,
referring
to
the
portion
of
the
Minister’s
decision
in
which
he
affirms
the
assessments
"‘on
the
ground
that
the
legal
costs
and
the
expenses
in
question
were
expenses
of
the
taxpayer
not
wholly,
exclusively
and
necessarily
laid
out
or
expended
for
the
purpose
of
earning
its
income’’,
pointed
out
that
this
is
the
exact
language
of
sec.
6(a)
which
is
pleaded
in
the
statement
of
defence.
Counsel
then
dealing
with
the
following
declaration
of
the
decision:
"‘but
were
in
fact
expenses
incurred
in
the
prosecution
of
its
action
to
protect
its
trade
name
and
trade
and
were
the
application
of
profits
after
they
had
been
earned
as
profits
for
the
purpose
of
earning
future
profits
and
accordingly
were
properly
disallowed
for
income
tax
purposes
under
and
by
reason
of
the
provisions
of
section
6
and
other
provisions
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
in
that
respect”
stated
that,
while
the
exact
language
of
subsec.
(b)of
sec.
6
is
not
used,
the
effect
of
the
language
that
is
used
is
to
bring
it
into
operation.
He
concluded
that
the
statement
of
defence
is
not
too
wide
when
one
has
in
mind
the
decision
of
the
Minister.
I
must
say
that
this
seems
to
me
a
mere
technicality
without
any
importance.
Counsel
for
respondent
stressed
the
point
that
appellant
is
an
English
company
incorporated
by
Royal
Charter
in
England,
having
its
head
office
in
that
country,
but
operating
in
Great
Britain,
Canada,
Newfoundland
and
other
countries.
He
submitted
that,
if
it
were
a
Canadian
company,
all
its
earnings,
wheresoever
they
might
be
obtained
would
be
income
for
taxation
purposes
in
Canada
and
that
there
might
be
some
deduction
for
tax
purposes
in
other
countries
but
that
they
would
be
taken
into
account
in
determining
the
tax
payable
in
Canada
and
that
all
of
its
disbursements
properly
attributable
to
income
would
be
deducted
no
matter
where
they
might
have
been
incurred.
Reasserting
that
the
appellant
is
an
English
company
doing
business
in
Great
Britain,
in
Canada,
Newfoundland
and
various
other
countries,
Mr.
Smith
declared
that
it
is
not
taxed
in
Canada
in
respect
to
its
profits
on
the
English
business
or
the
Newfoundland
business
and
that
those
profits
are
kept
separate
and
distinct.
He
added
that
they
are
not
brought
into
charge
for
the
determination
of
the
Canadian
income
tax
and
that
likewise
its
expenses
in
earning
the
income
in
Britain,
Newfoudland
or
other
countries
are
not
deductible
from
its
Canadian
earnings.
This
seems
manifest.
Counsel
nevertheless
insisted
by
‘stating
that
the
costs
of
an
action
brought
by
appellant
in
England
similar
to
the
one
instituted
by
it
in
the
United
States
could
not
be
deducted
from
the
Canadian
earnings
of
the
company
for
income
tax
purposes
in
Canada.
He
observed
that
it
is
clear
from
appellant’s
statement,
as
filed
in
the
Income
Tax
office,
that
the
Canadian
earnings
and
expenses
are
separated,
for
Canadian
income
tax
purposes,
from
its
earnings
and
expenses
in
Great
Britain,
Newfoundland
and
other
places
where
a
separate
business
318
carried
on.
Counsel
pointed
out
that
the
proceedings
in
the
State
of
Washington
against
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
Ine.
were
brought
and
the
expenses
in
connection
therewith
incurred
in
a
foreign
country.
He
further
pointed
out
that
a
subsidiary
company
of
appellant
has
been
incorporated
in
the
State
of
New
York
under
the
name
of
Hudson’s
Bay
Company
Inc.
He
intimated
that,
if
the
appellant
has
earnings
in
the
United
States
and
if
it
incurs
expenses
in
connection
therewith,
those
earnings
and
expenses
should
be
attributable
to
the
appellant’s
American
subsidiary
rather
than
to
the
Canadian
aspects
of
the
appellant’s
business.
He
specified
particularly
that,
if
the
appellant,
which
is
an
English
company,
deems
it
necessary
to
take
proceedings
in
the
United
States
against
an
American
company
in
respect
of
its
trade
name,
reputation
and
goodwill,
the
costs
of
such
proceedings
should
be
charged
to
the
American
subsidiary
of
appellant
or
at
least
against
the
United
States
business
of
the
appellant.
He
wondered
why
these
costs,
incurred
in
a
foreign
country,
should
be
charged
against
the
Canadian
earnings
of
appellant
rather
than
against
its
earnings
in
England
where
its
head
office
is
situate.
He
asked
himself
where
the
line
is
to
be
drawn
between
Canadian
and
other
business
if
the
costs
of
proceedings
instituted
in
the
United
States
are
to
be
charged
against
the
appellant’s
Canadian
income.
He
observed
that
the
appellant
claims
a
universal
reputation
as
the
greatest
fur
producing
and
trading
establishment
in
the
world
and,
supposing
that
the
appellant
should
bring
an
action,
similar
in
scope
and
object
to
the
one
whose
costs
are
now
in
question,
in
Australia,
China
or
Brazil,
asked
himself
if
it
would
be
proper
to
deduct
the
costs
of
such
action
from
the
appellant’s
Canadian
income.
His
contention
was
that
the
question
put
in
that
form
answers
itself.
He
said
that
the
head
office
of
the
appellant
being
in
Great
Britain
it
would
not
be
proper
to
deduct
the
said
costs
from
the
Canadian
income
of
the
company.
He
saw
no
reason
why
the
costs
of
an
action
taken
in
the
United
States
should
differ
from
costs
of
actions
taken
in
other
parts
of
the
world,
bearing
in
mind
that
the
appellant
is
an
English
company,
that
it
segregates
its
British
and
Newfoundland
business
from
its
Canadian
business.
Counsel
submitted
that
the
costs
of
legal
proceedings
instituted
in
defence
of
reputation,
trade
name
or
goodwill
should
be
chargeable
against
the
appellant’s
business
in
the
country
where
the
costs
are
incurred
and,
if
it
is
not
possible
to
do
so,
that
they
should
be
charged
against
the
business
in
the
country
where
the
appellant
has
its
head
office,
to
wit,
in
the
present
instance,
in
England.
He
urged
that
the
trade
name,
reputation
and
goodwill
are
assets
of
the
corporation
as
a
whole
and
not
of
its
Canadian
business
alone
and
that
it
is
difficult
to
see
how
expenses
made
in
a
foreign
country
in
connection
with
these
assets
can
properly
be
charged
against
the
appellant’s
Canadian
business
alone.
It
was
argued
on
behalf
of
appellant
that,
as
there
is
no
suggestion
in
the
pleadings
nor
in
the
Minister’s
decision
that
the
costs
and
expenses
in
question
ought
not
to
be
charged
to
the
Canadian
business
of
appellant,
but
ought
to
be
charged
to
its
business
in
the
United
States
or,
if
that
cannot
be
done,
to
its
business
in
England,
where
the
company
has
its
head
office,
that
omission
disposes
of
this
aspect
of
the
defence
and
that
the
respondent
cannot
now
raise
that
point.
I
am
inclined
to
adopt
that
view.
However
that
may
be,
the
evidence
discloses
that
it
was
the
appellant’s
Canadian
business
which
was
being
interfered
with
by
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
Ince.
of
Seattle
and
that
the
action
taken
in
the
United
States
to
check
that
interference
was
legitimate.
I
believe
that
the
costs
incurred
in
connection
with
this
action
were
properly
chargeable
against
the
Canadian
income.
Counsel
for
respondent
submitted
that,
in
dealing
with
English
cases,
it
is
necessary
to
remember
that
the
English
rule
corresponding
to
sec.
6(a)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
is
broader.
Rule
3
of
rules
applicable
to
cases
I
and
II,
schedule
D,
under
the
English
Act,
reads
thus:
"‘In
computing
the
amount
of
the
profits
or
gains
to
be
charged,
no
sum
shall
be
deducted
in
respect
of
(a)
any
disbursements
or
expenses,
not
being
money
wholly
and
exclusively
laid
out
or
expended
for
the
purposes
of
the
trade,
profession,
employment
or
vocation.’‘
Counsel
for
respondent
drew
the
attention
of
the
Court
to
the
difference
between
the
text
of
para.
(a)
of
sec.
6
of
the
Canadian
Act
and
of
para.
(a)
of
rule
3
of
the
English
Act,
the
first
one
mentioning
‘‘for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
income’’
and
the
second
one
using
the
words
‘‘for
the
purposes
of
the
trade”,
etc.
He
concluded
that
the
language
of
the
Canadian
sections
is
narrower
and
therefore
less
favourable
to
the
taxpayer.
There
is
evidently
a
difference
in
the
phraseology
of
the
two
provisions,
but
I
do
not
think
that
it
has
the
importance
which
counsel
attempted
to
attach
to
it.
The
question
has
been
considered
from
a
broad
point
of
view
of
commercial
accountancy,
as
to
what
are
proper
charges
against
revenue
and
what
are
proper
charges
against
capital.
In
the
case
of
Strong
and
Co.
of
Romsey,
Ltd.
v.
Woodifield,
5
Rep.
of
Tax
Cases,
215;
[1906]
A.C.
448,
Lord
Davey
stated
(p.
220)
:
“It
is
not
enough
that
the
disbursement
is
made
in
the
course
of,
or
arises
out
of,
or
is
connected
with,
the
trade
or
is
made
out
of
the
profits
of
the
trade.
It
must
be
made
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
profits.’’
In
the
case
of
Robert
Addie
&
Sons’
Collieries
Ltd.
v.
Com
9
r
of
Inland
Revenue,
8
Rep.
of
Tax
Cases
671,
Lord
Clyde
adopted
the
same
opinion:
see
page
676.
The
legal
expenses
and
costs
laid
out
by
the
appellant
to
protect
its
trade
name,
business
and
reputation
were
not
incurred
with
the
object
of
creating
or
acquiring
any
new
asset
but
were
incurred
in
the
ordinary
course
of
protecting
and
maintaining
its
already
existing
assets.
On
the
other
hand,
I
do
not
believe
that
these
expenses
and
costs
can
be
considered
as
being
a
capital
outlay
or
loss.
Counsel
for
respondent
submitted
that
the
appellant,
by
means
of
the
proceedings
instituted
in
the
United
States,
had
obtained
an
enduring
asset.
I
cannot
agree
with
this
proposition.
There
was
no
new
asset
brought
into
existence
by
these
proceedings.
The
expenses
were
incurred
in
the
ordinary
course
of
maintaining
the
already
existing
assets
of
the
company.
Reverting
to
the
distinction
between
revenue
and
capital,
I
may
note
that
in
the
case
of
Southern
v.
Borax
Consolidated
Ltd.
(wbt
supra)
Lawrence,
J.,
in
addition
to
making
the
statement
hereinabove
quoted,
expressed
the
following
opinion,
which,
as
I
think,
is
applicable
to
the
present
case
(p.
417)
:
«6€
The
only
way
in
which
it
can
be
said
that
there
was
here
any
alteration
in
the
capital
assets
of
the
respondent
company
was
that
the
city
of
Los
Angeles
had
been
removed
from
the
category
of
possible
litigants
who
might
challenge
the
company’s
title.
I
cannot
think
that
that
makes
the
payment
a
capital
payment.”
The
respondent,
in
Southern
v.
Borax
Consolidated
Ltd.,
obtained
a
decision
maintaining
the
title
to
its
property.
In
the
case
of
Hudson’s
Bay
Co.
v.
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Co.
Inc.,
the
plaintiff
merely
got
a
decision
in
a
passing
off
action
enjoining
the
defendant
(inter
alia)
from
using
or
employing,
after
a
certain
period,
the
name
“Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company’’
and
any
name
having
the
words
‘‘Hudson’’
and
“Bay”
either
jointly
or
severally,
the
initials
‘‘HB’’
or
any
colourable
imitation
of
the
name
‘‘
Hudson’s
Bay”.
As
suggested
by
counsel
for
appellant,
the
latter
might
face
at
any
time
the
obligation
of
instituting
other
proceedings
against
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company,
Inc.,
or
start
an
action
against
someone
else
using
the
name
‘‘Hudson
Bay”
or
a
colourable
imitation
thereof.
In
the
case
of
Kellogg
Co.
of
Can.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
[1942]
C.T.C.
51,
referred
to
by
Mr.
Burbidge,
the
appellant,
a
manufacturer
of
cereal
products,
and
one
of
its
customers
were
made
defendants
in
an
action
brought
by
Canadian
Shredded
Wheat
Company
which
claimed
infringement
by
both
defendants
of
certain
trade
mark
rights
and
asked
for
an
injunction
restraining
them
from
using
the
words
‘‘Shredded
Wheat’’
or
‘‘Shredded
Whole
Wheat’’
or
‘‘Shredded
Whole
Wheat
Biscuit”
or
any
words
only
colourably
differing
therefrom
and
damages.
The
appellants
successfully
defended
the
action
on
behalf
of
both
defendants.
In
computing
its
income
for
1936
and
1937
the
appellant
deducted
the
sums
of
money
paid
out
for
legal
expenses
on
account
of
said
action.
These
deductions
were
disallowed
by
the
Commissioner
of
Income
Tax.
The
latter’s
disallowance
was
naturally
affirmed
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
from
whose
decision
an
appeal
was
taken
to
the
Court.
It
was
held
that
the
payments
were
made
involuntarily
in
the
course
of
business
to
enable
the
appellant
to
continue
the
sales
of
its
products
as
before
action
was
taken
against
it
and
not
to
secure
or
preserve
an
actual
asset
or
enduring
advantage
to
appellant.
A
brief
extract
from
the
judgment
of
Maclean,
J.
may
be
convenient
(p.
61):
"The
broad
principle
laid
down
by
Lord
Cave
in
British
Insulated
v.
Atherton
[1926]
A.C.
205
at
213,
is
not,
in
my
opinion,
of
any
assistance
in
the
present
case.
Applying
that
test
to
the
present
case,
the
payment
here
made
was
not,
I
think,
an
expenditure
incurred
or
made
‘once
and
for
all’,
with
a
view
of
bringing
a
new
asset
into
existence,
nor
can
it,
in
my
opinion,
properly
be
said
that
it
brought
into
existence
an
advantage
for
the
enduring
benefit
of
Kellogg’s
trade
within
the
meaning
of
the
well
known
language
used
by
Lord
Cave
in
a
certain
passage
of
his
speech
in
that
case.
What
the
House
of
Lords
was
considering
in
that
case
was
a
sum
irrevocably
set
aside
as
a
nucleus
of
a
pension
fund
established
by
a
trust
deed
for
the
benefit
of
the
company’s
clerical
staff,
and,
as
was
said
by
Lawrence,
L.J.
in
the
Anglo-Persian
Oil
case,
supra,
I
have
no
doubt
that
Lord
Cave
had
that
fact
in
mind
when
he
spoke
of
an
advantage
for
the
enduring
benefit
of
the
company’s
trade.
Such
an
expenditure
differs
fundamentally
from
the
expenditure
with
which
we
are
concerned
in
the
present
case.
Here,
the
expenditure
brought
no
such
permanent
advantage
into
existence
for
the
taxpayer’s
trade.
I
do
not
think
it
can
be
said
that
the
expenditure
in
question
here
brought
into
existence
any
asset
that
could
possibly
appear
as
such
in
any
balance
sheet,
or
that
it
procured
an
enduring
advantage
for
the
taxpayer’s
trade
which
must
presuppose
that
something
was
acquired
which
had
no
prior
existence.
’
’
After
stating
that
the
case
of
Kellogg
Co.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
closely
resembles
that
of
Noble
v.
Mitchell
(ubt
supra),
in
which
a
large
sum
of
money
was
expended
by
a
company
to
get
rid
of
a
managing
director,
and
quoting
passages
from
the
reasons
of
the
Master
of
the
Rolls
and
of
Lord
Justice
Sargent,
which
I
do
not
deem
necessary
to
transcribe
here
and
which
may
be
easily
referred
to,
Maclean,
J.
declared
that
these
remarks
would
appear
to
be
applicable
and
added
(p.
63)
:
“Here,
Kellogg
had
encountered
a
business
difficulty,
one
associated
directly
with
the
sales
branch
of
its
business,
which
it
had
to
get
rid
of,
if
possible,
in
order
to
continue
the
sales
of
its
products
as
it
had
in
the
past.”
An
appeal
was
taken
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
and
the
same
was
dismissed,
[1943]
C.T.C.
1.
Sir
Lyman
Duff,
who
delivered
the
judgment
of
the
Court,
after
referring
to
the
case
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.,
made,
among
others,
the
following
statements
(p.
3)
:
"‘The
present
appeal
concerns
expenditures
made
by
the
respondent
company
in
payment
of
the
costs
of
litigation
between
that
company
and
the
Canadian
Shredded
Wheat
Company.
**#**
As
regards
this
payment,
the
question
in
issue
was
whether
or
not
the
registered
trade
marks
of
the
plaintiffs
in
the
action
were
valid
trade
marks,
or,
in
other
words,
whether
or
not
the
present
respondents,
The
Kellogg
Company,
and
all
other
members
of
the
public
were
excluded
from
the
use
of
the
words
in
respect
of
which
the
complaint
was
made.
The
right
upon
which
the
respondents
relied
was
not
a
right
of
property,
or
an
exclusive
right
of
any
description,
but
the
right
(in
common
with
all
other
members
of
the
public)
to
deseribe
their
goods
in
the
manner
in
which
they
were
describing
them.’’
The
comments
contained
in
para.
316
of
Halsbury’s
Laws
of
England,
2nd
edition,
volume
17,
are
pertinent
and
illustrative:
"316.
Though
it
is
clear
that
the
expenses
allowable
are
such
as
are
necessary
to
earn
the
receipts
of
the
trade,
this
proposition
must
be
applied
in
a
reasonable
way,
and
must
not
be
construed
so
as
to
preclude
the
deduction
of
those
expenses
as
a
result
of
which
receipts
or
profits
may
accrue
in
the
future.
For
example,
the
cost
of
a
reasonable
amount
of
advertising
is
usually
admitted
as
a
business
expense,
although
the
result
of
a
particular
advertisement
might
not
be
reflected
in
an
increase
in
trade
receipts
in
the
year
in
which
the
cost
was
incurred.
The
principle
is
that
expenses
to
earn
future
profits
are
allowable
deductions,
and
this
principle
has
been
extended
to
include
expenditure
to
avoid
future
expense
which
does
not
bring
into
being
a
tangible
asset.’’
The
cases
mentioned
in
notes
(i)
and
(k)
at
the
bottom
of
page
155
deserve
attention
and
may
be
usefully
consulted.
The
costs
and
expenses
laid
out
by
the
appellant
to
prevent
the
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company,
of
Seattle,
from
using
a
firm
name
so
closely
resembling
its
own
that
it
misled
many
American
tourists
and
induced
them
to
believe
that
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Com-
pany
was
a
branch
or
subsidiary
of
the
appellant
and
to
thereby
turn
to
the
appellant
company
the
profits
or
gains
derived
by
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
from
sales
made
to
purchasers
believing
that
they
were
dealing
with
the
appellant
must,
in
my
judgment,
be
considered
as
disbursements
or
expenses
laid
out
and
expended
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
income
as
prescribed
in
para.
(a)
of
subsec.
1
of
sec.
6
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
These
costs
and
expenses
were
not
laid
out
with
the
object
of
acquiring
or
bringing
into
existence
an
asset
;
they
were
made
in
the
ordinary
course
of
preserving
and
maintaining
the
trade
of
the
appellant
and
safeguarding
it
from
the
diversion
thereof
by
a
party
misusing
the
appellant’s
name.
I
do
not
believe
that
these
costs
and
expenses
can
be
considered
as
a
capital
outlay.
I
do
not
think
that
the
assertion
set
forth
by
counsel
for
respondent
that
the
costs
and
expenses
in
question
constitute
an
expenditure
made
once
and
for
all
for
the
enduring
benefit
of
the
trade
is
founded.
The
argument
made
on
behalf
of
respondent
that
the
appellant
in
taking
proceedings
against
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
had
acquired
part
of
the
latter’s
goodwill,
since
it
had
been
in
business
for
approximately
thirty
years,
apart
from
the
fact
that
it
is
not
mentioned
in
the
pleadings,
is
not,
to
my
mind,
serious.
The
action
was
taken
after
long
and
protracted
negotiations
had
been
carried
on,
when
it
was
seen
that
no
solution
could
be
obtained
otherwise.
I
have
already
stated
that
the
respondent’s
contention
that
the
costs
and
expenses
in
question,
if
deductible
from
the
profits
and
gains
of
the
appellant,
must
be
deducted
from
the
profits
and
gains
of
the
American
subsidiary,
viz.,
Hudson’s
Bay,
Company
Inc.,
of
New
York,
or,
if
it
cannot
be
done,
from
those
of
the
appellant’s
business
in
Great
Britain,
is,
to
my
mind,
ill-
founded
seeing
that
the
business
of
appellant
which
was
affected
by
the
illegal
trade
of
Hudson
Bay
Fur
Company
was
the
Canadian
section
thereof.
After
a
careful
perusal
of
the
evidence
and
of
the
able
and
comprehensive
argument
of
counsel
and
an
elaborate
study
of
the
precedents,
I
have
reached
the
conclusion
that
the
legal
costs
and
expenses
in
question
amounting
to
$10,377
and
$22,952.50
paid
by
the
appellant
in
its
fiscal
years
ending
January
31,
1938,
and
January
31,
1939,
respectively
must
be
considered
as
disbursements
or
expenses
wholly,
exclusively
and
necessarily
laid
out
for
the
purpose
of
earning
its
income
and
that
they
are
not
an
outlay,
loss
or
replacement
of
capital.
There
will
accordingly
be
judgment
in
favour
of
the
appellant
maintaining
the
appeal,
setting
aside
the
decision
of
the
Minister
and
the
notices
of
assessment
for
the
years
1938
and
1939
and
declaring
that
the
sum
of
$10,377
and
$22,952.50
must
be
deducted
from
the
income
of
the
appellant
for
its
fiscal
years
ending
January
31,
1938,
and
January
31,
1939,
respectively.
The
appellant
will
be
entitled
to
its
costs
against
respondent.
Appeal
allowed.